Nuclear wasteScientists develop deep borehole disposal (DBD) method to deal with nuclear waste

Published 16 April 2015

Technologies which will enable nuclear waste to be sealed five kilometers below the Earth’s surface could provide a safer, cheaper and more viable alternative for disposing of the U.K.’s high level nuclear waste. Scientists calculate that all of the U.K.’s high level nuclear waste from spent fuel reprocessing could be disposed of in just six boreholes five kilometers deep, fitting within a site no larger than a football pitch. The concept — called deep borehole disposal — has been developed primarily in the United Kingdom, but is likely to see its first field trials in the United States next year.

Technologies which will enable nuclear waste to be sealed five kilometers below the Earth’s surface could provide a safer, cheaper and more viable alternative for disposing of the U.K.’s high level nuclear waste.

Scientists at the University of Sheffield calculate that all of the U.K.’s high level nuclear waste from spent fuel reprocessing could be disposed of in just six boreholes five kilometers deep, fitting within a site no larger than a football pitch.

The concept — called deep borehole disposal — has been developed primarily in the United Kingdom, but is likely to see its first field trials in the United States next year. If the trials are successful, the United States hopes to dispose of its “hottest” and most radioactive waste — left over from plutonium production and currently stored at Hanford in Washington State — in a deep borehole.

A University of Sheffield release reports that university researchers are presenting the latest findings relating to these trials and new concepts for sealing the waste into the boreholes at the American Nuclear Society (ANS) conference in Charleston this week (April 13-16 2015).

Professor Fergus Gibb of the University of Sheffield’s Faculty of Engineering explained: “Deep borehole disposal is particularly suitable for high level nuclear waste, such as spent fuel, where high levels of radioactivity and heat make other alternatives very difficult. Much of the drilling expertise and equipment to create the boreholes already exists in the oil and gas and geothermal industries. A demonstration borehole – such as is planned in the US – is what is now needed to move this technology forward.”

At the ANS conference, Professor Gibb, with co-researcher Dr. Karl Travis, presented modeling work carried out by the University of Sheffield team on the Hanford waste, which confirms that around 40 percent of the waste, in terms of radioactivity, currently stored at the U.S. site could be disposed of in a single borehole.

Fundamental to the success of deep borehole disposal is the ability to seal the hole completely to prevent radionuclides getting back up to the surface. Professor Gibb has designed a method to do this, which he presented at the conference: to melt a layer of granite over the waste, which will re-solidify to have the same properties as natural rock.

Professor Gibb’s colleague at the University of Sheffield, Dr. Nick Collier, proposed a method of fixing and surrounding the waste within the borehole by using specialist cements able to handle the temperatures and pressures at that depth.

Deep borehole disposal (DBD) has a number of advantages over the current solution envisaged for all U.K. nuclear waste, which is in a mined repository at 500 meter depth: DBD is effectively “pay-as-you-go” disposal. A mined repository can cost from hundreds of millions to tens of billions of dollars to construct before any waste can be disposed of; DBD costs a few tens of millions of dollars per borehole.

There are more geological sites suitable for DBD, as the granite layer which is required can be found at appropriate depths under most of the continental crust.

  • A borehole could be drilled, filled, and sealed in less than five years, compared to the current timescale for a U.K. mined repository, which is to open in 2040 and take its first waste by 2075 (although a site has not yet been agreed).
  • As DBD disposes of nuclear waste at greater depths and with greater safety, and because there are more potential sites available, it should be easier to obtain public and political acceptance of the technology.
  • DBD has limited environmental impact and does not require a huge site: the holes are a maximum 0.6 meter in diameter and can be positioned just a few tens of meters apart. Once a borehole is complete, all physical infrastructure on the surface can be removed.
  • While seismic activity might damage the containers within the borehole, fracture the surrounding rock and disrupt some of the nearest barriers in the borehole, it would still not destroy the isolation of the waste or make it possible for radioactivity to reach the surface or any ground water.

The demonstration borehole in the United States will be drilled just under half a meter in diameter and trials will be conducted to ensure waste packages can be inserted into the borehole and recovered if required. Initial results are expected in 2016. If these results are positive, disposal of the Hanford waste capsules would then take place in another borehole, just 0.22 meter in diameter.

The American Nuclear Society International High-Level Radioactive Waste Management conference Real World Solutions for Integrated Management of Used Fuel and HLW is taking place in Charleston, South Carolina, 13-16 April 2015.