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Suggested Citation:"Appendix E: Acronyms and Symbols." National Research Council. 2001. Improving Operations and Long-Term Safety of the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant: Final Report. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10143.
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Page 137

Appendix E

Acronyms and Symbols

ASCE: American Society of Civil Engineers

CCA: compliance certification application

CCDF: Complementary Cumulative Distribution Function

CEMRC: Carlsbad Environmental Monitoring and Research Center

CH: Contact Handled

CH4: Methane

CO2: Carbon dioxide

DOE: U.S. Department of Energy

DOT: U.S. Department of Transportation

DRZ: Disturbed rock zone

EEG: State of New Mexico Environmental Evaluation Group

EPA: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

H2: Hydrogen

H2S: Hydrogen sulfide

INEEL: Idaho Engineering and Environmental Laboratory

ITS: Intelligent transportation system

LWA: Land Withdrawal Act

MgO: Magnesium oxide

MTMH: Metric tons of heavy metal

N2: Nitrogen

NORM: Naturally occurring radioactive material

NRC: National Research Council

PA: Performance assessment

RCRA: Resource Conservation and Recovery Act

RH: Remote handled

SNL: Sandia National Laboratories

TRANSCOM: Transportation Tracking and Communication

Suggested Citation:"Appendix E: Acronyms and Symbols." National Research Council. 2001. Improving Operations and Long-Term Safety of the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant: Final Report. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10143.
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Page 138

TRIZ: Theory of the Solution of Inventive Problems

TRU: Transuranic

TRUPACT-II: Transuranic Package Transporter, Model II

UNM: University of New Mexico

USNRC: U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission

WIPP: Waste Isolation Pilot Plant

Suggested Citation:"Appendix E: Acronyms and Symbols." National Research Council. 2001. Improving Operations and Long-Term Safety of the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant: Final Report. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10143.
×
Page 137
Suggested Citation:"Appendix E: Acronyms and Symbols." National Research Council. 2001. Improving Operations and Long-Term Safety of the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant: Final Report. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10143.
×
Page 138
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The Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP) is a deep underground mined facility for the disposal of transuranic waste resulting from the nation's defense program. Transuranic waste is defined as waste contaminated with transuranic radionuclides with half-life greater than 20 years and activity greater than 100 nanocuries per gram. The waste mainly consists of contaminated protective clothing, rags, old tools and equipment, pieces of dismantled buildings, chemical residues, and scrap materials. The total activity of the waste expected to be disposed at the WIPP is estimated to be approximately 7 million curies, including 12,900 kilograms of plutonium distributed throughout the waste in very dilute form. The WIPP is located near the community of Carlsbad, in southeastern New Mexico. The geological setting is a 600-meter thick, 250 million-year-old saltbed, the Salado Formation, lying 660 meters below the surface.

The National Research Council (NRC) has been providing the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) scientific and technical evaluations of the WIPP since 1978. The committee's task is twofold: (1) to identify technical issues that can be addressed to enhance confidence in the safe and long-term performance of the repository and (2) to identify opportunities for improving the National Transuranic (TRU) Program for waste management, especially with regard to the safety of workers and the public.

This is the first full NRC report issued following the certification of the facility by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) on May 18, 1998. An interim report was issued by the committee in April 2000 and is reproduced in this report. The main findings and recommendations from the interim report have been incorporated into the body of this report. The overarching finding and recommendation of this report is that the activity that would best enhance confidence in the safe and long-term performance of the repository is to monitor critical performance parameters during the long pre-closure phase of repository operations (35 to possibly 100 years). Indeed, in the first 50 to 100 years the rates of important processes such as salt creep, brine inflow (if any), and microbial activity are predicted to be the highest and will be less significant later. The committee recommends that the results of the on-site monitoring program be used to improve the performance assessment for recertification purposes. These results will determine whether the need for a new performance assessment is warranted. For the National TRU Program, the committee finds that the DOE is implementing many of the recommendations of its interim report. It is important that the DOE continue its efforts to improve the packaging, characterization, and transportation of the transuranic waste.

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