| Office of Civilian Radioactive
Waste Management A study of how fluid moves through rock At the Exploratory Studies Facility at Yucca Mountain, workers
have excavated a series of four test alcoves on the right side
of the tunnel. Here, scientists have tested how air, water, and
other gases move through layers of rock within Yucca Mountain.
By injecting a constant flow of pressurized air into specific areas, scientists were able to gain answers to these questions. To reach this goal, workers dry-drilled a total of seven boreholes within the alcoves and removed the rock core produced. They had to be especially careful when choosing where to drill their boreholes to insure realistic results. Specially designed plugs were placed inside each borehole at different levels so that segments were kept isolated for testing. These plugs not only kept the segments isolated, but also helped monitor the direction of the flow of gas within the borehole. Tracer gas was injected into one borehole. The presence of gas—when detected by special instruments and sensors within the other two boreholes—yielded important information about the mountain’s permeability. Other tests were also conducted in each alcove. Scientists collected rock samples to study their mineral content, and to learn more about their origin and composition. Rocks can reveal much about the geologic past. For example, a careful analysis will show how old a sample is, what pressures and temperatures shaped it, and even establish what the material was like that formed the rock. Finally, scientists looked for layers and traces of calcite-silica deposits
in the alcoves and in their analyses of rock samples. This provided information
about how old the deposits are and how they were deposited by water moving
through the layers of rock. |