The flammable gas safety issue was recognized in 1990 with the declaration of an unreviewed safety question (USQ) by the U. S. Department of Energy as a result of the behavior of the Hanford Site high-level waste tank 241-SY-101. This tank exhibited episodic releases of flammable gas that on a couple of occasions exceeded the lower flammability limit of hydrogen in air. Over the past six years there has been a considerable amount of knowledge gained about the chemical and physical processes that govern the behavior of tank 241-SY-1 01 and other tanks associated with the flammable gas safety issue. This report was prepared to provide an overview of that knowledge and to provide a description of the key information still needed to resolve the...
This report summarizes progress in evaluating thermal and radiolytic flammable gas generation in act...
The key phenomena of the Flammable Gas Safety Issue are generation of the gas mixture, the modes of ...
All Hanford high-level waste tanks generate flammable gas. Some tanks can accumulate gas and have th...
Flammable gases generated in radioactive liquids. Twenty-five high level radioactive liquid waste st...
The major emphasis of this report is to describe what has been learned about the generation, retenti...
The Hanford Site is home to 177 large, underground nuclear waste storage tanks. Numerous safety and ...
This report presents an overview of what is known about the flammability of the gases generated and ...
The 177 storage tanks at Hanford contain a vast array of radioactive waste forms resulting, primaril...
The primary purpose of this report is to identify and resolve some of the flammable gas and thermal ...
Flammable gases such as hydrogen, ammonia, and methane are observed in the tank dome space of the Ha...
The 177 underground waste storage tanks at the Hanford Site contain millions of gallons of radioacti...
This report describes the current understanding of flammable gas retention and release in Hanford si...
Research at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) has probed the physical mechanisms and wast...
Radioactive nuclear waste at the Hanford Site is stored in underground waste storage tanks at the si...
This report summarizes progress in evaluating thermal and radiolytic rate parameters for flammable g...
This report summarizes progress in evaluating thermal and radiolytic flammable gas generation in act...
The key phenomena of the Flammable Gas Safety Issue are generation of the gas mixture, the modes of ...
All Hanford high-level waste tanks generate flammable gas. Some tanks can accumulate gas and have th...
Flammable gases generated in radioactive liquids. Twenty-five high level radioactive liquid waste st...
The major emphasis of this report is to describe what has been learned about the generation, retenti...
The Hanford Site is home to 177 large, underground nuclear waste storage tanks. Numerous safety and ...
This report presents an overview of what is known about the flammability of the gases generated and ...
The 177 storage tanks at Hanford contain a vast array of radioactive waste forms resulting, primaril...
The primary purpose of this report is to identify and resolve some of the flammable gas and thermal ...
Flammable gases such as hydrogen, ammonia, and methane are observed in the tank dome space of the Ha...
The 177 underground waste storage tanks at the Hanford Site contain millions of gallons of radioacti...
This report describes the current understanding of flammable gas retention and release in Hanford si...
Research at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) has probed the physical mechanisms and wast...
Radioactive nuclear waste at the Hanford Site is stored in underground waste storage tanks at the si...
This report summarizes progress in evaluating thermal and radiolytic rate parameters for flammable g...
This report summarizes progress in evaluating thermal and radiolytic flammable gas generation in act...
The key phenomena of the Flammable Gas Safety Issue are generation of the gas mixture, the modes of ...
All Hanford high-level waste tanks generate flammable gas. Some tanks can accumulate gas and have th...