DOE Holds New Workshops to Aid Idaho Waste Treatment Facility Startup
The Integrated Waste Treatment Unit at DOE's Idaho Site.
IDAHO FALLS, Idaho
– Technical experts from around the country recently converged in Idaho
Falls to aid DOE’s efforts to safely and effectively start up the
Integrated Waste Treatment Unit (IWTU), intended to treat the
approximately 900,000 gallons of remaining radioactive liquid tank waste
at DOE’s Idaho Site.
Scientists and engineers from DOE-Idaho, DOE-Headquarters, the Idaho
National Laboratory, Idaho Cleanup Project, the National Engineering
Technology Laboratory, and Hazen Research met at a Fluidized Bed
Workshop in mid-April to discuss the mechanical processes that take
place within the IWTU’s Denitration Mineralization Reformer (DMR), a key
reaction vessel in the facility. The IWTU uses steam-reforming
technology to convert the liquid sodium-bearing waste to a granular
solid, which is transferred to stainless steel canisters for safe
storage and eventual disposal.
The gathered experts discussed the conditions observed inside the DMR
during three prior waste simulant runs. During these runs, which used a
non-radioactive chemical mixture with similar properties as the actual
liquid waste stored in three underground tanks, operators and engineers
noticed the formation of a bark-like material inside the DMR vessel
walls. Not only did the bark-like material alter the ideal treatment
conditions inside the treatment vessel, it also impacted the performance
of the IWTU’s auger-grinder (reduces the granular solid size suitable
for transfer to the stainless steel canisters) when the material shed
from the vessel walls. Notably, though, the bark-like material found in
the treatment vessel after the third simulant run was not as extensive
and was easier to remove than similar material found after an earlier
simulant campaign.
The workshop participants discussed what process operating conditions
could be contributing to the bark-like formation inside the DMR vessel.
At a second Fluidized Bed Workshop scheduled to be held this week in
Idaho Falls, scientists and engineers will discuss what might be the
ideal fluidized bed process conditions in terms of vessel temperature,
ideal amount of alumina to keep inside the vessel, and the flow rate of
the liquid waste into the alumina media. Proposed changes will likely be
incorporated into the next waste simulant run.
During the winter, DOE convened a Chemistry Summit
of scientific experts to examine the chemical processes that take place
inside the DMR during simulant treatment. The group identified
potential equipment and process modifications to address the chemistry
and fluidization issues. Some of these solutions can be implemented in
the near term, while others will require additional testing. The
near-term path forward is to implement some of the team’s
recommendations during the next planned simulant run.
In the first three simulant runs, IWTU processed about 90,000 gallons,
which is equivalent to about one-tenth the amount of sodium-bearing
waste in the tank farm. The simulant runs have provided valuable plant
operating data that will be evaluated as part of the DOE’s decision to
proceed to hot operation of the facility. DOE is taking a deliberative
approach to identify and resolve any technical issues that could
negatively impact the facility and to ensure safe and reliable
radioactive waste treatment operations at IWTU.
DOE is working to meet an agreement with the state of Idaho to begin
actual waste processing at IWTU by Sept. 30, 2016. The Department will
only begin operations at the IWTU, however, when it is safe to do so.
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