Cargando…

Innovative Waste Management in the Mercury Loop of the EURISOL Multi-MW Converter Target

The choice of mercury as target material imposes various questions concerning the safe operation of such a system that are related to the physical and chemical properties of the target material itself and the nuclear reaction products produced within the target during its life time of several decade...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: PSI: Jörg Neuhausen, Dorothea Schumann, Rugard Dressler, Susanne Horn, Sabrina Lüthi, Stephan Heinitz, Suresh ChirikiCERN: Thierry Stora, Martin Eller
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 23/0
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/1355034
_version_ 1780922406045483008
author PSI: Jörg Neuhausen, Dorothea Schumann, Rugard Dressler, Susanne Horn, Sabrina Lüthi, Stephan Heinitz, Suresh ChirikiCERN: Thierry Stora, Martin Eller
author_facet PSI: Jörg Neuhausen, Dorothea Schumann, Rugard Dressler, Susanne Horn, Sabrina Lüthi, Stephan Heinitz, Suresh ChirikiCERN: Thierry Stora, Martin Eller
author_sort PSI: Jörg Neuhausen, Dorothea Schumann, Rugard Dressler, Susanne Horn, Sabrina Lüthi, Stephan Heinitz, Suresh ChirikiCERN: Thierry Stora, Martin Eller
collection CERN
description The choice of mercury as target material imposes various questions concerning the safe operation of such a system that are related to the physical and chemical properties of the target material itself and the nuclear reaction products produced within the target during its life time of several decades. Therefore, a subtask was created within the EURISOL-DS project that is concerned with studying an innovative waste management for the generated radioactivity by chemical means. Such a study strongly depends on the radioactive inventory and its distribution throughout the target and loop system. Radioactive inventory calculations were performed within task 5 [6]. The distribution of nuclear reaction products and their chemical state that can be expected within the target and loop system is one of the topics covered in this report. Based on the results obtained by theoretical studies as well as laboratory scale experiments, the feasibility of waste reduction using chemical methods, both conventional (e.g. leaching, distillation) and innovative (e.g. surface adsorption) are studied experimentally. The results and their implications on separation procedures that can be favourably applied to a spallation target system are discussed with respect to both handling of the radioactive waste and extraction of valuable nuclides for medical, scientific and industrial applications.
id cern-1355034
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 23/0
record_format invenio
spelling cern-13550342019-09-30T06:29:59Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/1355034engPSI: Jörg Neuhausen, Dorothea Schumann, Rugard Dressler, Susanne Horn, Sabrina Lüthi, Stephan Heinitz, Suresh ChirikiCERN: Thierry Stora, Martin EllerInnovative Waste Management in the Mercury Loop of the EURISOL Multi-MW Converter Target2: TASK 2The choice of mercury as target material imposes various questions concerning the safe operation of such a system that are related to the physical and chemical properties of the target material itself and the nuclear reaction products produced within the target during its life time of several decades. Therefore, a subtask was created within the EURISOL-DS project that is concerned with studying an innovative waste management for the generated radioactivity by chemical means. Such a study strongly depends on the radioactive inventory and its distribution throughout the target and loop system. Radioactive inventory calculations were performed within task 5 [6]. The distribution of nuclear reaction products and their chemical state that can be expected within the target and loop system is one of the topics covered in this report. Based on the results obtained by theoretical studies as well as laboratory scale experiments, the feasibility of waste reduction using chemical methods, both conventional (e.g. leaching, distillation) and innovative (e.g. surface adsorption) are studied experimentally. The results and their implications on separation procedures that can be favourably applied to a spallation target system are discussed with respect to both handling of the radioactive waste and extraction of valuable nuclides for medical, scientific and industrial applications.EURISOL-02-25-2009-0034oai:cds.cern.ch:135503423/06/09
spellingShingle 2: TASK 2
PSI: Jörg Neuhausen, Dorothea Schumann, Rugard Dressler, Susanne Horn, Sabrina Lüthi, Stephan Heinitz, Suresh ChirikiCERN: Thierry Stora, Martin Eller
Innovative Waste Management in the Mercury Loop of the EURISOL Multi-MW Converter Target
title Innovative Waste Management in the Mercury Loop of the EURISOL Multi-MW Converter Target
title_full Innovative Waste Management in the Mercury Loop of the EURISOL Multi-MW Converter Target
title_fullStr Innovative Waste Management in the Mercury Loop of the EURISOL Multi-MW Converter Target
title_full_unstemmed Innovative Waste Management in the Mercury Loop of the EURISOL Multi-MW Converter Target
title_short Innovative Waste Management in the Mercury Loop of the EURISOL Multi-MW Converter Target
title_sort innovative waste management in the mercury loop of the eurisol multi-mw converter target
topic 2: TASK 2
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/1355034
work_keys_str_mv AT psijorgneuhausendorotheaschumannrugarddresslersusannehornsabrinalu776thistephanheinitzsureshchirikicernthierrystoramartineller innovativewastemanagementinthemercuryloopoftheeurisolmultimwconvertertarget