J. Chapman; A. Hassan; K. Pohlmann
Desert Research Institute, University and Community College System of Nevada (United States). Funding organisation: USDOE Office of Environment, Safety and Health EH (United States)2001
Desert Research Institute, University and Community College System of Nevada (United States). Funding organisation: USDOE Office of Environment, Safety and Health EH (United States)2001
AbstractAbstract
[en] Groundwater models of seawater intrusion environments can be calibrated using both hydraulic and chemical information. The possible impact of the long-term transient process of sea level change is difficult to identify, but important to accurate simulation of present conditions. The response times of the pressure and chemical fields to major fluctuations in sea level change are investigated
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18 Oct 2001; 17 p; AC08-00NV13609; Available from OSTI as DE00788367
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Miscellaneous
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Modeling of Groundwater Flow and Radionuclide Transport at the Climax Mine sub-CAU, Nevada Test Site
K. Pohlmann; M. Ye; D. Reeves; M. Zavarin; D. Decker; J. Chapman
Desert Research Institute, Nevada System of Higher Education, Reno and Las Vegas, NV (United States). Funding organisation: US Department of Energy (United States)2007
Desert Research Institute, Nevada System of Higher Education, Reno and Las Vegas, NV (United States). Funding organisation: US Department of Energy (United States)2007
AbstractAbstract
[en] The Yucca Flat-Climax Mine Corrective Action Unit (CAU) on the Nevada Test Site comprises 747 underground nuclear detonations, all but three of which were conducted in alluvial, volcanic, and carbonate rocks in Yucca Flat. The remaining three tests were conducted in the very different hydrogeologic setting of the Climax Mine granite stock located in Area 15 at the northern end of Yucca Flat. As part of the Corrective Action Investigation (CAI) for the Yucca Flat-Climax Mine CAU, models of groundwater flow and radionuclide transport will be developed for Yucca Flat. However, two aspects of these CAU-scale models require focused modeling at the northern end of Yucca Flat beyond the capability of these large models. First, boundary conditions and boundary flows along the northern reaches of the Yucca Flat-Climax Mine CAU require evaluation to a higher level of detail than the CAU-scale Yucca Flat model can efficiently provide. Second, radionuclide fluxes from the Climax tests require analysis of flow and transport in fractured granite, a unique hydrologic environment as compared to Yucca Flat proper. This report describes the Climax Mine sub-CAU modeling studies conducted to address these issues, with the results providing a direct feed into the CAI for the Yucca Flat-Climax Mine CAU. Three underground nuclear detonations were conducted for weapons effects testing in the Climax stock between 1962 and 1966: Hard Hat, Pile Driver, and Tiny Tot. Though there is uncertainty regarding the position of the water table in the stock, it is likely that all three tests were conducted in the unsaturated zone. In the early 1980s, the Spent Fuel Test-Climax (SFT-C) was constructed to evaluate the feasibility of retrievable, deep geologic storage of commercial nuclear reactor wastes. Detailed mapping of fractures and faults carried out for the SFT-C studies greatly expanded earlier data sets collected in association with the nuclear tests and provided invaluable information for subsequent modeling studies at Climax. The objectives of the Climax Mine sub-CAU work are to (1) provide simulated heads and groundwater flows for the northern boundaries of the Yucca Flat-Climax Mine CAU model, while incorporating alternative conceptualizations of the hydrogeologic system with their associated uncertainty, and (2) provide radionuclide fluxes from the three tests in the Climax stock using modeling techniques that account for groundwater flow in fractured granite. Meeting these two objectives required two different model scales. The northern boundary groundwater fluxes were addressed using the Death Valley Regional Flow System (DVRFS) model (Belcher, 2004) developed by the U.S. Geological Survey as a modeling framework, with refined hydrostratigraphy in a zone north of Yucca Flat and including Climax stock. Radionuclide transport was simulated using a separate model confined to the granite stock itself, but linked to regional groundwater flow through boundary conditions and calibration targets
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28 Sep 2007; 331 p; AC52-06NA26383; Available from OSTI as DE00922626; PURL: https://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/922626-qd85uE/; doi 10.2172/922626
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Report
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K. Pohlmann; G. Pohll; J. Chapman; A. Hassan; R. Carroll; C. Shirley
Desert Research Institute (United States). Funding organisation: USDOE - Office of Environmental Management (EM) (United States)2004
Desert Research Institute (United States). Funding organisation: USDOE - Office of Environmental Management (EM) (United States)2004
AbstractAbstract
[en] The purpose of this work is to characterize groundwater flow and contaminant transport at the Shoal underground nuclear test through numerical modeling using site-specific hydrologic data. The ultimate objective is the development of a contaminant boundary, a model-predicted perimeter defining the extent of radionuclide-contaminated groundwater from the underground test throughout 1,000 years at a prescribed level of confidence. This boundary will be developed using the numerical models described here, after they are approved for that purpose by DOE and NDEP
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1 Mar 2004; 197 p; AC08-00NV13609; Also available from OSTI as DE00850296; PURL: https://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/850296-qhxgVx/
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Report
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