Fluidized Bed Steam Reformer (FBSR) Na-AI-SI (NAS) Waste Form for Hanford LAW and Secondary Waste [electronic resource]
FBSR sodium-aluminosilicate (NAS) waste form has been identified as a promising supplemental treatment technology for Hanford LAW and/or Waste Treatment Plant Secondary Waste (WTP-SW). Objectives of the project: 1) Prove the robustness of FBSR as a waste form for either LAW and/or WTP-SW; 2) Reduce...
Saved in:
Online Access: |
Online Access |
---|---|
Corporate Authors: | , |
Format: | Government Document Electronic eBook |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Washington, D.C. : Oak Ridge, Tenn. :
United States. Department of Energy. Office of Environmental Management ; distributed by the Office of Scientific and Technical Information, U.S. Department of Energy,
2010.
|
Subjects: |
Summary: | FBSR sodium-aluminosilicate (NAS) waste form has been identified as a promising supplemental treatment technology for Hanford LAW and/or Waste Treatment Plant Secondary Waste (WTP-SW). Objectives of the project: 1) Prove the robustness of FBSR as a waste form for either LAW and/or WTP-SW; 2) Reduce the risk associated with implementing the FBSR NAS waste form as a supplemental treatment technology for Hanford LAW and/or WTP-SW; 3) Conduct two treatability studies with SRS radioactive wastes that have been shimmed to look like Hanford WTP-SW and LAW; 4) Conduct three treatability studies with actual Hanford tank wastes; 5) Fill key data gaps; 6) Link previous and new results together. |
---|---|
Item Description: | Published through SciTech Connect. 11/01/2010. "s09-03" " srnl-sti-2010-00742-s" EM Waste Processing Technical Exchange 2010, Atlanta, Georgia, November 16 through November 18, 2010. Pierce, E.; Jantzen, C. |