Plasma Mass Filters For Nuclear Waste Reprocessing
Author(s) -
Abraham J. Fetterman and Nathaniel J. Fisch
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
osti oai (u.s. department of energy office of scientific and technical information)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/1014697
Subject(s) - centrifuge , plasma , trap (plumbing) , waste management , nuclear engineering , filter (signal processing) , process engineering , environmental science , chemistry , materials science , mechanics , physics , engineering , nuclear physics , environmental engineering , electrical engineering
Practical disposal of nuclear waste requires high-throughput separation techniques. The most dangerous part of nuclear waste is the fission product, which contains the most active and mobile radioisotopes and produces most of the heat. We suggest that the fission products could be separated as a group from nuclear waste using plasma mass filters. Plasmabased processes are well suited to separating nuclear waste, because mass rather than chemical properties are used for separation. A single plasma stage can replace several stages of chemical separation, producing separate streams of bulk elements, fission products, and actinoids. The plasma mass filters may have lower cost and produce less auxiliary waste than chemical processing plants. Three rotating plasma configurations are considered that act as mass filters: the plasma centrifuge, the Ohkawa filter, and the asymmetric centrifugal trap
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