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AbstractAbstract
[en] Crushed salt from the host Salado Formation is proposed as a sealing material in one component of a multicomponent seal system design for the shafts of the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP), a mined geological repository for storage and disposal of transuranic radioactive wastes located near Carlsbad, New Mexico. The crushed salt will be compacted and placed at a density approaching 90% of the intact density of the host Salado salt. Creep closure of the shaft will further compact the crushed salt over time, thereby reducing the crushed-salt permeability from the initial state and creating an effective long-term seal. A structural model and a fluid flow model have been developed to provide an estimate of crushed-salt reconsolidation rate as a function of depth, time, and pore pressure. Model results are obtained in terms of crushed-salt permeability as a function of time and depth within the salt column. Model results indicate that average salt column permeability will be reduced to 3.3 x 10-20 m2 in about 100 years, which provides for an acceptable long-term seal component
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1997; 9 p; 4. ASCE congress on computing in civil engineering; Philadelphia, PA (United States); 16-18 Jun 1997; CONF-970663--4; CONTRACT AC04-94AL85000; Also available from OSTI as DE97006889; NTIS; US Govt. Printing Office Dep
Record Type
Report
Literature Type
Conference; Numerical Data
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