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Anthropogenic influences on groundwater in the vicinity of a long-lived radioactive waste repository: Anthropogenic influences on groundwater

Hydrological Processes

Thomas, Matthew A.; Kuhlman, Kristopher L.; Ward, Anderson L.

The groundwater flow system in the Culebra Dolomite Member (Culebra) of the Permian Rustler Formation is a potential radionuclide release pathway from the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP), the only deep geological repository for transuranic waste in the United States. We did not expect that early conceptual models of the Culebra, groundwater levels would fluctuate markedly, except in response to long-term climatic changes, with response times on the order of hundreds to thousands of years. Recent groundwater pressures measured in monitoring wells record more than 25 m of drawdown. The fluctuations are attributed to pumping activities at a privately-owned well that may be associated with the demand of the Permian Basin hydrocarbon industry for water. Furthermore, the unprecedented magnitude of drawdown provides an opportunity to quantitatively assess the influence of unplanned anthropogenic forcings near the WIPP. Spatially variable realizations of Culebra saturated hydraulic conductivity and storativity were used to develop groundwater flow models to estimate a pumping rate for the private well and investigate its effect on advective transport. Simulated drawdown shows reasonable agreement with observations (average Model Efficiency coefficient = 0.7). Steepened hydraulic gradients associated with the pumping reduce estimates of conservative particle travel times across the domain by one-half and shift the intersection of the average particle track with the compliance boundary by more than two kilometers. Finally, the value of the transient simulations conducted for this study lie in their ability to (i) improve understanding of the Culebra groundwater flow system and (ii) challenge the notion of time-invariant land use in the vicinity of the WIPP.

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Consensus on Intermediate Scale Salt Field Test Design

Kuhlman, Kristopher L.; Mills, Melissa M.; Matteo, Edward N.

This report summarizes the first stage in a collaborative effort by Sandia, Los Alamos, and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratories to design a small-diameter borehole heater test in salt at the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP) for the US Department of Energy Office of Nuclear Energy (DOE-NE). The intention is to complete test design during the remainder of fiscal year 2017 (FY17), and the implementation of the test will begin in FY18. This document is the result of regular meetings between the three national labs and the DOE-NE, and is intended to represent a consensus of these meetings and discussions.

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Drilling and testing in the deep borehole field test

ANS IHLRWM 2017 - 16th International High-Level Radioactive Waste Management Conference: Creating a Safe and Secure Energy Future for Generations to Come - Driving Toward Long-Term Storage and Disposal

Kuhlman, Kristopher L.; Sassani, David C.; Freeze, Geoffrey; Hardin, Ernest; Brady, Patrick V.

The Deep Borehole Field Test (DBFT) is a planned multi-year project led by the US Department of Energy's Office of Nuclear Energy to drill two boreholes to 5 km total depth into crystalline basement in the continental US. The purpose of the first characterization borehole is to demonstrate the ability to characterize in situ formation fluids through sampling and perform downhole hydraulic testing to demonstrate groundwater from 3 to 5 km depth is old and isolated from the atmosphere. The purpose of the second larger-diameter borehole is to demonstrate safe surface and downhole handling procedures. This paper details many of the drilling, testing, and characterization activities planned in the first smaller-diameter characterization borehole.

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Modeling coupled reactive flow processes in fractured crystalline rock

ANS IHLRWM 2017 - 16th International High-Level Radioactive Waste Management Conference: Creating a Safe and Secure Energy Future for Generations to Come - Driving Toward Long-Term Storage and Disposal

Stein, Emily; Frederick, Jennifer M.; Hammond, Glenn E.; Kuhlman, Kristopher L.; Mariner, Paul; Sevougian, Stephen D.

Numerical simulation of a repository for heatgenerating nuclear waste in fractured crystalline rock requires a method for simulating coupled heat and fluid flow and reactive radionuclide transport in both porous media (bentonite buffer, surface sediments) and fractured rock (the repository host rock). Discrete fracture networks (DFNs), networks of two-dimensional planes distributed in a three-dimensional domain, are commonly used to simulate isothermal fluid flow and particle transport in fractures, but unless coupled to a continuum, are incapable of simulating heat conduction through the rock matrix, and therefore incapable of capturing the effects of thermally driven fluid fluxes or of coupling chemical processes to thermal processes. We present a method for mapping a stochastically generated DFN to a porous medium domain that allows representation of porous and fractured media in the same domain, captures the behavior of radionuclide transport in fractured rock, and allows simulation of coupled heat and fluid flow including heat conduction through the matrix of the fractured rock. We apply the method within Sandia's Geologic Disposal Safety Assessment (GDSA) framework to conduct a post-closure performance assessment (PA) of a generic repository for commercial spent nuclear fuel in crystalline rock. The three-dimensional, kilometer-scale model domain contains approximately 4.5 million grid cells; grid refinement captures the detail of 3, 360 individual waste packages in 42 disposal drifts. Coupled heat and fluid flow and reactive transport are solved numerically with PFLOTRAN, a massively parallel multiphase flow and reactive transport code. Simulations of multiple fracture realizations were run to 1 million years, and indicate that, because of the channeled nature of fracture flow, thermally-driven fluid fluxes associated with peak repository temperatures may be a primary means of radionuclide transport out of the saturated repository. The channeled nature of fracture flow gives rise to unique challenges in uncertainty and sensitivity quantification, as radionuclide concentrations at any given location outside the repository depend heavily on the distribution of fractures in the domain.

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Results 151–175 of 273
Results 151–175 of 273