Maybe, but then there’s the
question of where – and how – you store all that glass
By
Todd B. Bates, Rutgers University
How
do you handle nuclear waste that
will be radioactive for millions of years, keeping it from harming people and
the environment?
It
isn’t easy, but Rutgers researcher Ashutosh Goel has
discovered ways to immobilize such waste – the offshoot of decades of nuclear
weapons production – in glass and ceramics.
Goel,
an assistant professor in the Department of Materials
Science and Engineering, is the primary inventor of a new method to
immobilize radioactive iodine in ceramics at room temperature. He’s also the
principal investigator (PI) or co-PI for six glass-related research projects
totaling $6.34 million in federal and private funding, with $3.335 million
going to Rutgers.
“Glass is a perfect material for immobilizing the radioactive wastes with excellent chemical durability,” said Goel, who works in the School of Engineering. Developing ways to immobilize iodine-129, which is especially troublesome, is crucial for its safe storage and disposal in underground geological formations.
The
half-life of iodine-129 is
15.7 million years, and it can disperse rapidly in air and water, according to
the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
If it’s released into the environment, iodine will linger for millions of
years. Iodine targets the thyroid gland and can increase the chances of getting
cancer.
Among
Goel’s major funders is the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE),
which oversees one of the world’s largest nuclear cleanups following 45 years
of producing nuclear weapons. The national weapons complex once had 16 major
facilities that covered vast swaths of Idaho, Nevada, South Carolina, Tennessee
and Washington state, according to the DOE.
The
agency says the Hanford site in
southeastern Washington, which manufactured more than 20 million pieces of
uranium metal fuel for nine nuclear reactors near the Columbia River, is its
biggest cleanup challenge.
Hanford
plants processed 110,000 tons of fuel from the reactors. Some 56 million
gallons of radioactive waste – enough to fill more than 1 million bathtubs –
went to 177 large underground tanks.
As many as 67 tanks – more than one third
– are thought to have leaked, the DOE says. The liquids have been pumped out of
the 67 tanks, leaving mostly dried solids.
The
Hanford cleanup mission commenced in 1989, and construction of a waste
treatment plant for the liquid radioactive waste in tanks was launched a decade
later and is more than three-fifths finished.
“What we’re talking about here is highly complex, multicomponent radioactive waste which contains almost everything in the periodic table,” Goel said. “What we’re focusing on is underground and has to be immobilized.”
“What we’re talking about here is highly complex, multicomponent radioactive waste which contains almost everything in the periodic table,” Goel said. “What we’re focusing on is underground and has to be immobilized.”
Goel,
a native of Punjab state in northern India, earned a doctorate in glasses and
glass-ceramics from the University of Aveiro in Portugal in 2009 and was a
postdoctoral researcher there. He worked as a “glass scientist” at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in 2011 and 2012,
and then as a senior scientist at Sterlite Technologies Ltd. in India before
joining the Rutgers faculty in January 2014.
The
six projects he’s leading or co-leading are funded by the DOE Office of River Protection, National Science Foundation and Corning Inc., with
collaborators from Washington State University, University of North Texas and Pacific Northwest National
Laboratory.
One
of his inventions involves mass producing chemically durable apatite minerals, or
glasses, to immobilize iodine without using high temperatures. A second
innovation deploys synthesizing apatite minerals from silver iodide particles.
He’s also studying how to immobilize sodium and alumina in high-level
radioactive waste in borosilicate glasses that
resist crystallization.
At
the Hanford site, creating glass with radioactive waste is expected to start in
around 2022 or 2023, Goel said, and “the implications of our research will be
much more visible by that time.”
The
research may eventually help lead to ways to safely dispose of highly radioactive spent nuclear fuel that
is stored now at commercial nuclear power
plants.
“It
depends on its composition, how complex it is and what it contains,” Goel said.
“If we know the chemical composition of the nuclear waste coming out from those
plants, we can definitely work on it.”