During fiscal year 1982, the US Department of Energy (DOE) assigned responsibility for managing civilian nuclear waste treatment programs in the United States to the Nuclear Waste Treatment Program (NWTP) at the Pacific Northwest Laboratory (PNL). One of the principal objectives of this program is to establish relationships between vitrification process control and glass quality. Users of the liquid-fed ceramic melter (LFCM) process will need such relationships in order to establish acceptance of vitrified high-level nuclear waste at a licensed federal repository without resorting to destructive examination of the canisters. The objective is to be able to supply a regulatory agency with an estimate of the composition, durability, and integr...
Since October 1984, the Pacific Northwest Laboratory (PNL) has operated a pilot-scale radioactive li...
The suitability of a Babcock & Wilcox cyclone furnace to vitrify a low-level radioactive liquid wast...
Vitrification is the process of capturing radioactive waste in glass. The Savannah River Site's (SRS...
This report is the first in a series of quarterly reports compiled by the Nuclear Waste Treatment Pr...
This report is compiled by the Nuclear Waste Treatment Program and the Hanford Waste Vitrification P...
The aim of the melt development program is to produce meltformed ceramic products that have the opti...
As part of its development program for the solidification of high-level nuclear waste, Pacific North...
Hanford Waste Vitrification Program (HWVP) activities for FY 1985 have included engineering and pilo...
During 1983, the Pacific Northwest Laboratory (PNL), at the request of the Department of Energy (DOE...
The vitrification of high-level waste is the internationally recognized standard to minimize the imp...
Liquid waste, made from zirconium-clad UO/sub 2/ power reactor fuel with an average burnup of 25,000...
Waste currently stored on the Hanford Reservation in underground tanks will be into High Level Waste...
Since 1996, the West Valley Demonstration Project (WVDP) has operated a slurry-fed ceramic melter to...
Over 270 kg of high-temperature borosilicate glass have been produced in a series of three short-ter...
The vitrification of high-level waste is the internationally recognized standard to minimize the imp...
Since October 1984, the Pacific Northwest Laboratory (PNL) has operated a pilot-scale radioactive li...
The suitability of a Babcock & Wilcox cyclone furnace to vitrify a low-level radioactive liquid wast...
Vitrification is the process of capturing radioactive waste in glass. The Savannah River Site's (SRS...
This report is the first in a series of quarterly reports compiled by the Nuclear Waste Treatment Pr...
This report is compiled by the Nuclear Waste Treatment Program and the Hanford Waste Vitrification P...
The aim of the melt development program is to produce meltformed ceramic products that have the opti...
As part of its development program for the solidification of high-level nuclear waste, Pacific North...
Hanford Waste Vitrification Program (HWVP) activities for FY 1985 have included engineering and pilo...
During 1983, the Pacific Northwest Laboratory (PNL), at the request of the Department of Energy (DOE...
The vitrification of high-level waste is the internationally recognized standard to minimize the imp...
Liquid waste, made from zirconium-clad UO/sub 2/ power reactor fuel with an average burnup of 25,000...
Waste currently stored on the Hanford Reservation in underground tanks will be into High Level Waste...
Since 1996, the West Valley Demonstration Project (WVDP) has operated a slurry-fed ceramic melter to...
Over 270 kg of high-temperature borosilicate glass have been produced in a series of three short-ter...
The vitrification of high-level waste is the internationally recognized standard to minimize the imp...
Since October 1984, the Pacific Northwest Laboratory (PNL) has operated a pilot-scale radioactive li...
The suitability of a Babcock & Wilcox cyclone furnace to vitrify a low-level radioactive liquid wast...
Vitrification is the process of capturing radioactive waste in glass. The Savannah River Site's (SRS...