The aims of the CFM project with its laboratory, in-situ and modelling approaches are to:
For more information please contact : Ingo Blechschmidt,
Colloid Formation and Migration Experiment
For the in-situ CFM experiment, a potential source of radionuclides and colloides (with radionuclides pre-spiked bentonite rings) will be emplaced in an advective flow system in the host rock.
The formation and transport of colloids and colloid-associated radionuclides is monitored under repository relevant flow conditions and over relevant distances.
The stability of the bentonite-derived colloids and possible reversibility of radionuclide uptake onto these colloids is investigated in time scales which minimise kinetic effects.
CFM in-situ experiment – situation at the AU tunnel
The overall concept has been defined, its implementation in terms of the in-situ set-up for the CFM experiment has not yet been finalised in detail. The principle elements are:
An essential requirement for the success of the experiment is the perfect seal of the tunnel surface where it is intersected by the shear zone. This requirement has been fulfilled with the megapacker.
The video above shows the concept of the transport of colloids through the shear zone.
Colloid Formation and Migration Experiment
Current CFM Project Partners
Contributors
Centro de Investigaciones Energéticas Medioambientales y Tecnológicas, (CIEMAT), Spain
Paul Scherrer Institute (PSI), Switzerland
Gesellschaft für Anlagen- und Reaktorsicherheit (GRS), Germany
KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Not Sweden
Los Alamos National Laboratory / Earth Systems Observations (LANL), USA
University of Helsinki / Departement of Chemistry (HYRL), Finland
CFM partner meeting in Karlsruhe (Hosted by KIT/INE) 29 to 30 June 2016
The Colloid Formation and Migration project is dedicated to study :
Laboratory studies Colloid-Rn interaction Colloid Generation Field test analysis |
Field experiments In situ test: formation & Migration tests with colloids, homologues, Rn tracers |
Modelling studies Solute, colloid and associated Rn transport Colloid generation |
The expected outputs by the end of the 10-year CFM project include:
The CFM project is the most recent in a series of experiments conducted within the Radionuclide Retardation Programme at the GTS which started in 1984. Of interest is the colloid-facilitated transport of radionuclides in a repository host rock. Such transport could influence the long-term performance of a deep geological repository for radioactive waste. The colloid ladder illustrates the five requirements that must be fulfilled for colloid-facilitated radionuclide transport to be significant.
Colloid ladder with the requirements for significant colloid-facilitated radionuclide transport in a deep geological repository
Recent investigations of colloid-facilitated radionuclide transport tend to address mainly two aspects of the colloid ladder:
For more information about this project, or to get in touch, please use our contact page.
Colloid Formation and Migration Experiment
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