In Situ Vitrification (ISV) is a promising technology, under
development by DOE, for long-term stabilization of hazardous waste
buried in shallow sites. It is based on melting contaminated soil at
the site and letting it cool. The melt solidifies into a glassy or
polycrystalline rock incorporating the waste, thus significantly
reducing the leaching of contaminants to groundwater. Melting is
induced by applying electrical power to the ground through electrodes
inserted vertically into the soil to be melted. Melting proceeds
downward and produces a roughly hemispherical body upon cooling.
A hood is placed over the site to confine gases and particulates
released from the melt and direct them to an off-gas treatment system.
The stages of the ISV process are depicted in
Figure 1.
Buried wastes, containing radioactive, organic, metallic, and
combustible materials, are a large component of DOE waste sites that
will require remediation. The advantages of ISV for such wastes
include: (1) hazardous organic contaminants and combustible materials
are pyrolyzed and destroyed, leading to volume reduction and avoidance
of future site subsidence, (2) radionuclides are incorporated into
glassy or crystalline phases upon cooling of the melt, resulting in
reduced mobility, and (3) metallic components are melted, thus
minimizing volume and surface area.
A well-instrumented pilot-scale field test was conducted at ORNL in May
1991. We have analyzed the massive data collected and developed
various models in order to: check consistency of data; understand the
processes involved and which ones dominate; determine effective values
of parameters (such as thermal and electrical conductivities); explain
what is observed, geochemically and thermally; and develop effective
estimation and simulation tools. For example, among other things, we
developed a simple non-invasive method for determining the melt
temperature from amperage and voltage data
(Figure 2).
Such indirect procedures are indispensable in applications to existing
highly contaminated sites. Among the crucial issues that modeling can
elucidate is the fate of water vapor beneath the melt and the
conditions under which a water-saturated zone can form.
Cooling and solidification of the melt is of great geological
interest. We developed a detailed model and simulation code for
cooling and solidification of a binary magma, featuring: coupled heat
conduction and solute diffusion, binary crystal-melt thermodynamics,
constitutional supercooling, temperature and composition dependent
thermophysical properties, conductive cooling of surrounding soil. The
description is macroscopic in terms of local variables (concentration,
enthalpy, temperature, solid fraction); conservation laws valid
everywhere in weak (integral) sense, phases distinguished only by
values of solid fraction. In this "volume-of-fluid" approach, no
explicit tracking of fronts is needed, which is particularly convenient
for computations. We have applied it to Diopside-Anorthite binary and
also to Feldspar-Pyroxene pseudobinary with very good results: matching
of simulated and experimental cooling curves
(Figure 3),
can determine effective values of parameters (e.g. conductivities)
and sensitivities, and can simulate various cooling scenarios.