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CRYSTAL: A model of a fractured rock geosphere for performance assessment within SKI Project-90

Abstract

A one-dimensional model of a fractured rock geosphere (CRYSTAL) has been developed, which forms part of the toolkit for the Swedish Nuclear Power Inspectorates reference repository performance assessment programme (Project-90). CRYSTAL predicts the transport of arbitrary-length decay chains by advection, diffusion and surface sorption in the fractures and sideways diffusion into the rock matrix. The model equations are solved in Laplace transform space, and inverted numerically to the time domain. This approach avoids time-stepping and consequently is numerically very efficient. The interface of CRYSTAL with the time-series output from a near-field model, such as CALIBRE, is achieved using the method of convolution. The response of the geosphere to delta-function inputs from each nuclide is combined with the time series outputs from the near-field, to obtain the nuclide flux emerging from the far-field. The method is sufficiently flexible to allow for any general time-series input from CALIBRE or any other near-field model. Although CRYSTAL was developed to handle one-dimensional transport in a fractured rock, the equations solved are sufficiently general for it to be used in other applications, e.g. in a porous system. (au).
Authors:
Worgan, K; Robinson, P [1] 
  1. Intera Information Technologies, Chiltern House, Henley-on-Thames (United Kingdom)
Publication Date:
Feb 01, 1992
Product Type:
Technical Report
Report Number:
SKI-TR-91-13
Reference Number:
SCA: 990200; 052002; PA: AIX-24:033992; SN: 93000963644
Resource Relation:
Other Information: PBD: Feb 1992
Subject:
99 GENERAL AND MISCELLANEOUS//MATHEMATICS, COMPUTING, AND INFORMATION SCIENCE; 12 MANAGEMENT OF RADIOACTIVE AND NON-RADIOACTIVE WASTES FROM NUCLEAR FACILITIES; RADIONUCLIDE MIGRATION; COMPUTERIZED SIMULATION; C CODES; EXPERIMENTAL DATA; GEOLOGIC FRACTURES; HYDRAULIC CONDUCTIVITY; LAPLACE TRANSFORMATION; MATHEMATICAL MODELS; RADIOACTIVE WASTE DISPOSAL; UNDERGROUND DISPOSAL; 990200; 052002; MATHEMATICS AND COMPUTERS; WASTE DISPOSAL AND STORAGE
OSTI ID:
10135609
Research Organizations:
Swedish Nuclear Power Inspectorate, Stockholm (Sweden)
Country of Origin:
Sweden
Language:
English
Other Identifying Numbers:
Other: ON: DE93621317; TRN: SE9300017033992
Availability:
OSTI; NTIS; INIS
Submitting Site:
SWDN
Size:
[28] p.
Announcement Date:
Jul 05, 2005

Citation Formats

Worgan, K, and Robinson, P. CRYSTAL: A model of a fractured rock geosphere for performance assessment within SKI Project-90. Sweden: N. p., 1992. Web.
Worgan, K, & Robinson, P. CRYSTAL: A model of a fractured rock geosphere for performance assessment within SKI Project-90. Sweden.
Worgan, K, and Robinson, P. 1992. "CRYSTAL: A model of a fractured rock geosphere for performance assessment within SKI Project-90." Sweden.
@misc{etde_10135609,
title = {CRYSTAL: A model of a fractured rock geosphere for performance assessment within SKI Project-90}
author = {Worgan, K, and Robinson, P}
abstractNote = {A one-dimensional model of a fractured rock geosphere (CRYSTAL) has been developed, which forms part of the toolkit for the Swedish Nuclear Power Inspectorates reference repository performance assessment programme (Project-90). CRYSTAL predicts the transport of arbitrary-length decay chains by advection, diffusion and surface sorption in the fractures and sideways diffusion into the rock matrix. The model equations are solved in Laplace transform space, and inverted numerically to the time domain. This approach avoids time-stepping and consequently is numerically very efficient. The interface of CRYSTAL with the time-series output from a near-field model, such as CALIBRE, is achieved using the method of convolution. The response of the geosphere to delta-function inputs from each nuclide is combined with the time series outputs from the near-field, to obtain the nuclide flux emerging from the far-field. The method is sufficiently flexible to allow for any general time-series input from CALIBRE or any other near-field model. Although CRYSTAL was developed to handle one-dimensional transport in a fractured rock, the equations solved are sufficiently general for it to be used in other applications, e.g. in a porous system. (au).}
place = {Sweden}
year = {1992}
month = {Feb}
}