Lockheed Martin Hanford Company (LMHC) is designing and assessing the performance of disposal facilities to receive radioactive wastes that are stored in single- and double-shell tanks at the Hanford Site. The preferred method of disposing of the portion that is classified as low-activity waste is to vitrify the liquid/slurry and place the solid product in near-surface, shallow-land burial facilities. The LMHC project to assess the performance of these disposal facilities is the Hanford Immobilized Low-Activity Tank Waste (ILAW) Performance Assessment (PA) activity. The goal of this project is to provide a reasonable expectation that the disposal of the waste is protective of the general public, groundwater resources, air resources, surface...
The Hanford Site in Washington State manages 177 underground storage tanks containing approximately ...
This report describes briefly the Hanford sitewide groundwater model and its application to the Low-...
The Hanford Site, in southeastern Washington State, has been used extensively to produce nuclear mat...
Lockheed Martin Hanford Company (LMHC) is designing and assessing the performance of disposal facili...
Lockheed Martin Hanford Company (LMHC) is designing and assessing the performance of disposal facili...
Lockheed Martin Hanford Company (LMHC) is designing and assessing the performance of disposal facili...
The US Department of Energy`s (DOE`s) Hanford Site has the most diverse and largest amounts of radio...
The Savannah River Site disposes of certain types of radioactive waste within subsurface-engineered ...
The US Department of Energy's Hanford Site has the most diverse and largest amounts of radioactive t...
This report summarizes the Hanford Site-Wide Groundwater Model and its application to the Immobilize...
This report summarizes the Hanford Site-Wide Groundwater Model and its application to the Immobilize...
Before low-level waste may be disposed of, a performance assessment must be written and then approve...
The U.S. Department of Energy Order 435.1, Radioactive Waste Management, requires a disposal authori...
As required by the Department of Energy (DOE) order on radioactive waste management (DOE 1999a) as i...
The ''Initial Single-Shell Tank System Performance Assessment for the Hanford Site [1] (SST PA) pres...
The Hanford Site in Washington State manages 177 underground storage tanks containing approximately ...
This report describes briefly the Hanford sitewide groundwater model and its application to the Low-...
The Hanford Site, in southeastern Washington State, has been used extensively to produce nuclear mat...
Lockheed Martin Hanford Company (LMHC) is designing and assessing the performance of disposal facili...
Lockheed Martin Hanford Company (LMHC) is designing and assessing the performance of disposal facili...
Lockheed Martin Hanford Company (LMHC) is designing and assessing the performance of disposal facili...
The US Department of Energy`s (DOE`s) Hanford Site has the most diverse and largest amounts of radio...
The Savannah River Site disposes of certain types of radioactive waste within subsurface-engineered ...
The US Department of Energy's Hanford Site has the most diverse and largest amounts of radioactive t...
This report summarizes the Hanford Site-Wide Groundwater Model and its application to the Immobilize...
This report summarizes the Hanford Site-Wide Groundwater Model and its application to the Immobilize...
Before low-level waste may be disposed of, a performance assessment must be written and then approve...
The U.S. Department of Energy Order 435.1, Radioactive Waste Management, requires a disposal authori...
As required by the Department of Energy (DOE) order on radioactive waste management (DOE 1999a) as i...
The ''Initial Single-Shell Tank System Performance Assessment for the Hanford Site [1] (SST PA) pres...
The Hanford Site in Washington State manages 177 underground storage tanks containing approximately ...
This report describes briefly the Hanford sitewide groundwater model and its application to the Low-...
The Hanford Site, in southeastern Washington State, has been used extensively to produce nuclear mat...