Multiple Roles of Clays in Radioactive Waste Confinement
CONTAINS OPEN ACCESS

This Special Publication highlights the importance of clays and clayey material, and their multiple roles, in many national geological disposal facilities for higher activity radioactive wastes. Clays can be both the disposal facility host rock and part of its intrinsic engineered barriers, and may be present in the surrounding geological environment. Clays possess various characteristics that make them high-quality barriers to the migration of radionuclides and chemical contaminants, e.g. very little water movement, diffusive transport, retention capacity, self-sealing capacity, stability over millions of years, homogeneity and lateral continuity.
The 20 papers presented in this Special Publication cover a range of topics related to clays in radioactive waste confinement. Aspects of clay characterization and behaviour at various temporal and spatial scales relevant to the confinement of radionuclides in clay are discussed, from phenomenological processes to the overall understanding of the performance and safety of geological disposal facilities.
Site screening of clay formations in NW China as host rocks for a high-level radioactive waste disposal repository
Correspondence: liuof99@163.com
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Published:January 01, 2019
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CiteCitation
Xiaodong Liu, Pinghui Liu, Chaocheng Dai, Shuai Liu, Juzhi Deng, Weimin Zhang, Zheng Yu, 2019. "Site screening of clay formations in NW China as host rocks for a high-level radioactive waste disposal repository", Multiple Roles of Clays in Radioactive Waste Confinement, S. Norris, E.A.C. Neeft, M. Van Geet
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Abstract
Deep geological disposal of high-level radioactive waste (HLW) in a repository with a system of engineered and natural barriers has been recognized as an appropriate disposal concept by Chinese authorities since 2003, and both crystalline rocks and argillaceous rocks are considered as the candidate host rocks for HLW disposal repository. The 1:200 000 regional survey indicated that there are potential clay formations in Mesozoic–Cenozoic sedimentary basins in NW China. Five candidate areas have been suggested with potential clay formations including the Tamusu and Suhongtu areas with upper K1 Bayingebi clay formations in the east Bayingebi Basin, in the...
- analcime
- argillaceous texture
- Asia
- basins
- carbonates
- China
- clastic sediments
- clay
- clay minerals
- depth
- disposal barriers
- dolomite
- Erlian Basin
- Far East
- framework silicates
- geophysical surveys
- high-level waste
- illite
- Inner Mongolia China
- kaolinite
- lacustrine environment
- lithofacies
- mineral assemblages
- mineral composition
- Ordos Basin
- Qaidam Basin
- radioactive waste
- sedimentary basins
- sediments
- sheet silicates
- silicates
- site exploration
- surveys
- textures
- thickness
- waste disposal
- waste disposal sites
- water content
- zeolite group
- Longdong China
- Bayingebi Formation
- Nanbaxian China
- Suhongtu China
- Bayingebi Basin
- Tamusu China
- Chuangjing China