Review

  • Journal of Nuclear Fuel Cycle and Waste Technology
  • Volume 2(3); 2004
  • Article

Journal of Nuclear Fuel Cycle and Waste Technology 2004;2(3):219-230. Published online: Sep, 30, 2004

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The Comparison on Treatment Method of Liquid Radioactive Waste in Yonggwang #3&4 and #5&6

  • Yu-Sun Yeom ; Jin-seung Lee ; Soong-Pyung Kim
Abstract

Most of the low-level liquid radioactive wastes generated from PWR plants are classified into high or low total suspended solid(HTDS or LTDS), and into radiochemical and radioactive laundry waste. Although the evaporation process has a high decontami- nation ability, it has several problems such as corrosion, foam, and congestion. A new liquid waste disposal process using the ion-exchange demineralizer(IED), instead of the current evaporation process, has been introduced into the Yonggwang NPP #5 and 6 . These two methods have been compared to understand the differences in this study. Aspects compared here were the released radioactivity amount of the liquid radioactive wastes, the dose of off-site residents, the decontamination factor, and the amount of the solid radioactive wastes. The IED system is designed to discharge higher radioactivity about 20% than the evaporating system, and the actual radioactivity released from the evaporating and IED system were 0.473mCi and 1.098mCi, respectively. The radioactivity released from the IED was 2.32 times higher than that of the evaporating system. The dose of off-site residents was 2.97×m㏜ for the evaporating system, and 6.47×m㏜ for IED. The decontamination factor(DF) of the evaporator is, in most cases, far lower than the lower limits of detection(LLD) with the Ge-Li detector. Due to the low concentration of the liquid wastes collected from the liquid waste system, the decontamination factor of IED is very low. Since there is not enough data on the amount of solid radioactive wastes generated by the evaporation system, the comparison on these two systems has been conducted on the basis of the design, and the comparison result was that the evaporating system generated more wastes about 40% than IED.

Keywords

on-exchange demineralizer(IED),evaporator,liquid radioactive waste,dose of off-site residents,decontamination factor,Treatment