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    • CFM - Colloid Formation & MigrationCFM - Colloid Formation & Migration
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    • CIM - Carbon-14 and Iodine-129 Migration in CementCIM - Carbon-14 and Iodine-129 Migration in Cement
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Carbon-14 and Iodine-129 Migration in Cement (CIM)

Carbon-14 and Iodine-129 Migration in Cement (CIM) - Organisation

Details
By McKie David
McKie David
Parent Category: GTS Phase VI
Category: Carbon-14 and Iodine-129 Migration in Cement (CIM)
12 November 2019
12 November 2019
Last Updated: 12 November 2019

The following milestones were defined to keep track on the experiment progress and define the products of the experiment.

Milestones:

M1 (Q1 2018): Finalise design

M2 (Q1 2019): experiment emplaced and non-active circulation started

M3 (Q1 2020): start of circulation of radionuclides

M4 (Q1 2022): Decision to overcore and distribute samples to laboratories or to continue circulation

M5 (End 2022): end of the first phase of the CIM project

 

Fig 3 Current project organisation

Figure 3: Current project organisation- Organisation

Carbon-14 and Iodine-129 Migration in Cement (CIM) - Experiment programme

Details
By McKie David
McKie David
Parent Category: GTS Phase VI
Category: Carbon-14 and Iodine-129 Migration in Cement (CIM)
12 November 2019
12 November 2019
Last Updated: 12 November 2019

The working programme comprises of the following steps:

Step 1: Finalise experimental design

Step 2: Drill needed boreholes and install initial condition monitoring

Step 3: Develop and construct the experimental equipment (packer system, surface equipment)

Step 4: Emplace circulation interval

Step 5: Start circulation and monitoring

Step 6: Overcore and post-mortem analysis

The project relies largely on experience acquired with previous projects using radionuclides at GTS (LTD, CFM) and will benefit from the lessons learned of these projects with respect to borehole and surface equipment and sampling.

Carbon-14 and Iodine-129 Migration in Cement (CIM) - Experiment concept

Details
By McKie David
McKie David
Parent Category: GTS Phase VI
Category: Carbon-14 and Iodine-129 Migration in Cement (CIM)
12 November 2019
12 November 2019
Last Updated: 12 November 2019

Design

  • A large diameter borehole (Ø 388 mm) backfilled with OPC mortar is being used as a proxy for cementitious material used as backfill and/or support material in L/ILW or TRU waste repositories.

  • In the centre of the mortar backfill, a small diameter (Ø 56 mm) borehole was drilled in November 2019 and equipped with a multi-packer system for the circulation of the test cocktail. Figure 1 shows the schematic setup in a sub-vertical borehole. The cocktail will be based on cement water and be prepared with the ions listed in Table 1.

  • The circulation interval will be connected to surface equipment, allowing for continuous monitoring of the fluid composition by online sensors and sampling. The monitoring will focus on activities of the injected radionuclides, chemistry, and microbiology.

  • Three monitoring boreholes drilled at relatively short distance (ca 15 cm) from the circulation borehole will allow to monitor the progress of the weakest sorbing compounds in the rock.

  • Based on the results from the experiment monitoring and discussions between the partners, the in-situ experiment will be overcored to allow for the analysis of diffusion profiles in the mortar and/or in the rock.

 

Table 1: Isotopes (radioactive and stable) foreseen for the circulation in the CIM experiment.

Isotope Species
C-14 Formate HCOO-
I-129 Iodide I-
H-3 HTO
Cl-36 Cl-
Cs-134 Cs+
Ba-133 Ba2+

 

HPF backfilled borehole

Four vertical or slightly inclined boreholes resulting from the overcoring of the HPF experiment at GTS have been backfilled with OPC mortar in 2004 (Figure 2).

One of these boreholes is being used as circulation borehole for the CIM experiment. The borehole and the depth of the circulation interval was selected in order to position the latter in an area of dense matrix with no distinct water conducting features. The selection was based on available geological logs from the HPF project. Three monitoring boreholes were drilled at short distance (ca 15 cm) from the source borehole.

Fig1 Setup of the circulation CIM

Figure 1: Setup of the circulation in a sub-vertical borehole

Fig 2 Schematic 3D view of the planned CIM borehole

Figure 2:          Schematic 3D view of the HPF and planned CIM borehole relative to the AU-126 shear zone and AU tunnel at the GTS

Carbon-14 and Iodine-129 Migration in Cement (CIM) Introduction

Details
By McKie David
McKie David
Parent Category: GTS Phase VI
Category: Carbon-14 and Iodine-129 Migration in Cement (CIM)
12 November 2019
12 November 2019
Last Updated: 14 September 2021

Carbon-14 and Iodine-129 released from repositories of L/ILW and TRU wastes typically contribute most to dose rates over the long-term (i.e. 10 ka to 100 ka) according to performance assessment (PA) calculations. This is primarily due to the combination of (i) high solubility and (ii) low sorption properties of the chemical forms that the two radionuclides are expected to exist in. In the case of C-14, experimental work on the speciation of carbon during corrosion of activated and un-activated steel under anoxic conditions similar to that of an emplacement tunnel showed the formation of oxygenated and reduced hydrocarbons, including carboxylic acids and CH4.

Methane is not expected to react with cementitious material or with the host rock. Uncertainties remain, however, on the retardation of carboxylic acids in clay and cementitious materials. In the case of formic acid, so far no retardation was expected in near-neutral environments; however laboratory experiments at PSI showed evidence of weak sorption of formic acid on cementitious material.

I-129 originates largely from reprocessed waste and is expected to occur mostly as iodide. Although it is planned that large amounts of cementitious material will be used in L/ILW and TRU waste repositories, there remains much uncertainty on both the release and in-situ retardation of I-129 as well as C-14 species in cementitious materials, especially in naturally aged cement on the field scale.

 

Aims of the experiment

The following aims were developed based on the wishes from the current partners (NUMO, RWM, SURAO and Nagra):

  • Simulate the transport of C-14 and I-129 through aged cementitious backfill of a L/ILW or TRU waste repository and into the saturated host rock
  • Provide confirmation on the effect of cementitious on material retarding C-14 and I-129
  • Further improve the process understanding of the behaviour of C-14 and I-129 under real in-situ conditions
  • Develop a method to upscale the results obtained from extensive laboratory based migration studies to the field/disposal tunnel scale.

For more information about this project, or to get in touch, please use our contact page.

The CFM Experiment

  • CFM Introduction
  • CFM Concept
  • CFM Project Aims
  • CFM Site Preparation [2009/10]
  • CFM Phase 1 [2004 - 2008]
  • CFM Phase 2 [2008 - 2013]
  • CFM In-situ Testing [2009/2011]
  • CFM In-situ Tracer Test [2012]
  • CFM : LIT (Long-term In situ Test) [2014]
  • CFM : IBET (In Rock Bentonite Erosion Test)
  • CFM References

40 years of Experience

Sample image 
40 Years experience

2014 marked a significant milestone in the history of the Grismel Test Site with the running of experiments which have spanned more than 30 years. Read more about the close to 40 years of scientific exploration in the 40 Years of History at the Gimsel Test Site section.

Grimsel 2010 - English (PDF 1,119 kb )

Grimsel 2010 - Deutsch  (PDF 989 kb )

CFM Video

GTS CFM PackerColloid Formation and Migration Video
A short video showing the tunnel packer installation.
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