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Yucca
Mountain: The Making of an Underground Laboratory
Located about 100 miles northwest of Las Vegas, Yucca Mountain is
the most thoroughly researched site of its kind in the world.
For more than 20 years the project has involved extensive scientific
study on Yucca Mountain's geology, hydrology, biology, and climate.
Experts throughout the world agree that the most feasible and safe
method for disposing of highly radioactive materials is to store
them deep underground.
The facilities you see at the surface are only a small fraction
of the science going on deep inside the distinctive ridge.
(***natural sound: TBM daylighting, people cheering***)
When the giant, Tunnel Boring Machine reached daylight at the South
Portal of Yucca Mountain's Exploratory Studies Facility in 1997,
it marked a major milestone-- the completion of the main tunnel
that loops beneath the mountain.
In this three-dimensional, cutaway view, you can see the tunnel
in relation to the surface as it slopes down, then turns south,
and up toward the exit.
This tunnel serves as an underground testing facility-- a five-mile
laboratory where scientists and engineers conduct studies on the
rock beneath Yucca Mountain.
The tunnel will also serve as the main access point to the planned
repository. An artist's conception of the footprint, or pattern
of underground emplacement tunnels, is shown on this graphic.
As you'll see later, the location and spacing of this pattern will
be important. Shielded transporters will move radioactive waste
containers down the main tunnel to their emplacement tunnels. Let's
take a closer look at the facilities, technology, and scientific
experiments going on inside the mountain.
The Tunnel Boring Machine, also called the TBM, was used to excavate
the five-mile tunnel. The TBM is twenty-five feet in diameter. The
machine, mapping gantry, and trailing gear stretched more than a
football field and a half... and were custom-built for the Yucca
Mountain Project.
Workers drilled and blasted a starter tunnel, where the TBM began
its work in 1994. The machine gripped the sides of the tunnel, so
it could push its massive cutter head into the rock.
(***natural sound... cutting and grinding rock***)
While the cutter head bored the tunnel... conveyor belts moved the
crushed rock to a designated area outside.
The TBM pulled 13 special railcars behind it that allowed scientists
to study rock samples and take detailed pictures of the tunnels.
It tunneled down and into the mountain, made a left turn, continued
South for more than three miles, and made another left turn... heading
up and out of the mountain.
In April, 1997-- after two-and-a-half years without a serious injury
to workers-- the TBM reached daylight.
But work inside Yucca Mountain was only beginning.
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At key points along the main tunnel, smaller "alcoves" and "niches"
have been excavated using drill-and-blast technologies and a machine
called the Alpine Miner.
(*** miner natural sound***)
The miner used two sets of massive teeth to grind and tear away
solid rock.
These alcoves are underground laboratories where scientists perform
tests and collect data about Yucca Mountain's geologic features.
The mountain has been drilled, poked, excavated, and prodded
Massive blocks have been cut from tunnel walls.
Many of the tests study how water moves through the mountain-- and
how the water might move radioactive particles through the mountain
and out to where people live.
Alcove One was the first alcove to be excavated.
Since it is closest to the surface of the mountain, experiments
there focus on how rain or snow moves through weathered fractures
in the rock.
It contains a series of instruments inserted into boreholes like
these, that give scientists information about how rainwater might
move from the mountain's surface through fractures and faults down
into the rock.
Results showed that most water evaporated or moved around the alcove.
A small amount, between 3 and 10 percent, was collected inside.
This test, and others, show that the fractures in Yucca Mountain
drain the little water that seeps into the mountain.
Knowing where the cracks are... allows scientists to design a repository
that keeps water away from the waste.
That's important because the enemy of any metal waste container
is water.
"Faults" are breaks in the earth's crust where the blocks of rock
on each side are moving-- or once moved-- in different directions.
While there are no faults within the repository, three important
faults lie beneath Yucca Mountain on either side of the repository
block.
The last major movement was tens of thousands of years ago, but
all repository facilities will meet current earthquake safety standards.
Scientists believe the Bow Ridge, Ghost Dance, and Solitario Canyon
faults are keys to water drainage in Yucca Mountain.
In Alcove Two, scientists have drilled boreholes across the Bow
Ridge Fault and are mapping fractures and geologic features to understand
how gases and fluids move through the fault.
Alcoves 3 and 4 were drilled in a layer of relatively softer rock,
called non-welded tuff. Boreholes drilled into this rock gave scientists
greater insight into how water and gases move through this type
of rock in Yucca Mountain-- and how water may be diverted around
radioactive waste.
Scientists found that this rock layer retains water and acts as
a sort of "tin roof" above the repository area.
Alcove 5 was drilled at the depth of the planned repository... nearly
a thousand feet below the top of Yucca Mountain... for an important
test on how heat affects the mountain.
Scientists drilled a tunnel of the same size and shape that might
be used to emplace radioactive waste.
They installed 9 canisters filled with heaters, to replicate the
high temperatures generated by the waste.
In December of 1997, scientists flipped the switch.
Over the next four years, the air in Alcove 5 was heated to nearly
400 degrees Fahrenheit ... almost twice the boiling point of water!
All the while, more than three thousand sensors attached to 10,000
feet of cable measured how water, the air, and the rock reacted
to the heat.
Jean Younker, Yucca Mountain Project Senior Scientist: “Understanding
how the heat affects the rock material will allow us to better design
both the distance between the tunnels for waste emplacement as well
as the spacing of the waste packages in the tunnels.”
In January of 2002, the heaters were turned off. Slowly, the air
and rock cooled... Monitoring continued during this cool-down phase
with the help of a special webcam that showed a live picture of
the alcove and its readouts.
Jean Younker, Yucca Mountain Project Senior Scientist: “What we
learned in Alcove 5 is that the rock material responds to heat in
the very same way that we thought it would based on laboratory tests
that we’ve conducted. And we find that the changes in the chemistry
of the water are as we would expect, given the composition of the
minerals in the rock. Very importantly, gathering data like this
allows you to gain confidence that your computer models are predicting
what will really happen.”
The Ghost Dance Fault is the main fault that borders the planned
repository area.
Alcoves Six and Seven were excavated at two points along the fault
to assess whether it acts as a barrier to water-- or helps it move
along.
Tests here confirmed that faults can act as a "fast pathway"-- to
move water away and past the repository tunnels.
Even with the wealth of information from the alcoves along the main
tunnel, the planned repository block is further inside the mountain.
Scientists wanted to learn more.
In March of 1998, it was time to bring in another tunnel boring
machine.
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Smaller than its cousin, the Robbins Tunnel Boring Machine is 16-and-a-half
feet in diameter.
Miners used this smaller TBM to bore a 1-point-7 mile diagonal tunnel
called the "cross drift".
It begins before the first curve of the main tunnel and cuts across
the level of the planned repository from northeast to southwest.
This TBM remains inside the mountain... at the end of the cross
drift... possibly entombed for eternity.
(***natural sound: "...ecrb ingress, 50 meters…”***)
This new tunnel allowed scientists to continue testing-- in the
same rock that would house the waste packages.
Yet another alcove, Alcove 8, was cut off the cross drift. Alcove
8 is above the main tunnel and gives scientists a larger area to
study water flow and seepage.
They set up pools of water above cracks and small holes in the floor
of the alcove.
Scientists filled the pools with precise amounts of water. Then,
they tracked how much water moved through the rock and into Niche
3... an opening carved off the main tunnel just below.
Results here showed that only about 10 percent of the water moved
far enough to reach Niche 3.
The remaining 90 percent moved around the niche or into the voids
in the surrounding rock..
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With more than 6 miles of underground working area, safety is a
top priority for the Yucca Mountain Project.
Workers underground are in constant contact with the surface.
They carry lights and special breathing equipment.
A trained mine rescue team is always on call.
Massive fans move huge quantities of air through the tunnel's ventilation
ducts.
The Project's commitment to worker safety has resulted in many important
achievements. For example, in 2002 the Project logged nearly 3 million
consecutive hours of work time without a day lost to injury.
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Jean Younker, Yucca Mountain Project Senior Scientist: "I hoped
you’ve enjoyed learning more about our Exploratory Studies Facility.
You might be wondering how does all of this science fit into the
future of Yucca Mountain.
The Department of Energy must get approval from the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission to build the repository.
The DOE will include extensive results of these experiments in a
License Application to the NRC that will fill several bookshelves.
If and when the NRC grants permission to begin constructing the
repository, the Exploratory Studies Facility would take on another
role.
It will become the main access tunnel for construction crews and
equipment excavating the new emplacement tunnels.
DOE plans to use a phased approach. Waste would be placed in completed
tunnels... even as construction continues in other tunnels of the
repository."
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The Yucca Mountain Project is the first of its kind. Experts from
all over the world have broken ground not only at Yucca Mountain,
but in the sciences as well.
If you would like to know more about the Yucca Mountain Project,
call us on our toll-free number, 1-800-225-6972, or you can find
us on the World Wide Web at www.ocrwm.doe.gov.
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