Publication Details

Category Text Publication
Reference Category Journals
DOI 10.1007/s12665-015-4156-6
Title (Primary) Modelling groundwater flow changes due to thermal effects of radioactive waste disposal at a hypothetical repository site near Sellafield, UK
Author Fraser Harris, A.P.; McDermott, C.I.; Kolditz, O. ORCID logo ; Haszeldine, R.S.
Source Titel Environmental Earth Sciences
Year 2015
Department ENVINF
Volume 74
Issue 2
Page From 1589
Page To 1602
Language englisch
Keywords Heat driven advective groundwater flow; Coupled process fault heterogeneity; Hydrogeology; Fault damage zone heat flux
UFZ wide themes RU5;
Abstract High-level radioactive waste (HLW) and spent fuel from nuclear power plants (SF) require very long duration disposal because of its long-lived toxicity. Specific repository design is necessary to accommodate the associated large heat generation from continual decay. Conceptual designs propose geological containment within salt, claystone, or crystalline bedrock. However, while many studies have investigated the safety of disposal in these host rocks, the interaction of near-field heat coupled to far-field groundwater flow for UK-relevant conditions has not been fully investigated. Using an excellent dataset from a repository investigation in saturated fractured rock at Sellafield, UK, with deep groundwater flow, a preliminary investigation of the effect of the addition of heat from HLW and SF on regional groundwater flow is undertaken. A coupled thermo-hydrogeological groundwater flow model dependent on fluid density and viscosity has been calibrated to field data, before heat is added to simulate waste. Substantial heating reduces fluid density and dynamic viscosity. Groundwater flows upwards through permeable damage zones of high-angle faults and increases natural velocity by 1.5×. Elevated groundwater temperatures are predicted at the surface in just hundreds of years. Travel times for conservative chemical species from the hypothetical repository to the St. Bees Sandstone aquifer are reduced by over one-third if engineered barriers fail at the point of containment, and remain reduced by hundreds of years for particles released thousands of years after containment. The results imply that in conditions similar to those modelled, the high-performance guarantee of the engineered barrier is essential to repository safety. A very good understanding of the coupled interaction of near-field heat and far-field groundwater flow will be important for safety cases, especially accuracy concerning heterogeneous fault discontinuities. It is necessary to model heat advection and faults at fractured sites.
Persistent UFZ Identifier https://www.ufz.de/index.php?en=20939&ufzPublicationIdentifier=16365
Fraser Harris, A.P., McDermott, C.I., Kolditz, O., Haszeldine, R.S. (2015):
Modelling groundwater flow changes due to thermal effects of radioactive waste disposal at a hypothetical repository site near Sellafield, UK
Environ. Earth Sci. 74 (2), 1589 - 1602 10.1007/s12665-015-4156-6