
Material Stabilization Project Management Plan
Author(s) -
D.R. Speer
Publication year - 1999
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/798004
Subject(s) - plutonium , plan (archaeology) , scope (computer science) , schedule , work breakdown structure , action plan , control (management) , work (physics) , transuranium element , project planning , construction engineering , project management , business , process management , operations management , engineering management , computer science , radioactive waste , waste management , systems engineering , engineering , project charter , mechanical engineering , chemistry , archaeology , artificial intelligence , history , ecology , radiochemistry , biology , operating system , programming language
This plan presents the overall objectives, description, justification and planning for the plutonium Finishing Plant (PFP) Materials Stabilization project. The intent of this plan is to describe how this project will be managed and integrated with other facility stabilization and deactivation activities. This plan supplements the overall integrated plan presented in the Plutonium Finishing Plant Integrated Project Management Plan (IPMP), HNF-3617, Rev. 0. This is the top-level definitive project management document that specifies the technical (work scope), schedule, and cost baselines to manager the execution of this project. It describes the organizational approach and roles/responsibilities to be implemented to execute the project. This plan is under configuration management and any deviations must be authorized by appropriate change control action. Materials stabilization is designated the responsibility to open and stabilize containers of plutonium metal, oxides, alloys, compounds, and sources. Each of these items is at least 30 weight percent plutonium/uranium. The output of this project will be containers of materials in a safe and stable form suitable for storage pending final packaging and/or transportation offsite. The corrosion products along with oxides and compounds will be stabilized via muffle furnaces to reduce the materials to high fired oxides