Technical Area
[0001] The present invention relates to processing wet radioactive wastes for permanent
storage and particularly to dewatering radioactive liquid treatment media such as
ion exchange resins, filter aid materials, zeolites, and other particulate wastes.
Background of the Invention
[0002] The nuclear power industry generates a certain amount of wet radioactive wastes,
and predominant among these radwastes are ion exchange resins and filter media that
are used to scrub radioisotopes from reactor cooling and waste waters. The resulting
suspensions or slurries of radioactive ion exchange resin, and in some cases filter
media particles, must be dewatered for safe shipping and disposal. By dewatering is
meant herein the removal of water from the waste particles such that the remaining
free standing water, during long-term burial, constitutes no more than 1.0% of the
waste volume. 10 C.F.R. Part 61. By free standing water is meant the drainable interstitial
water that freely gravity drains from a bed of particles.
[0003] Bead-type and powdered-type ion exchange resins constitute the vast majority of the
waste materials that must be dewatered. Such ion exchange resins average 3800 cubic
feet per year per commercial power plant and represent nearly half of the total wet
wastes generated by the utilities. Lesser amounts of activated carbon and inorganic
zeolite particles from radwaste treatment systems must also be dewatered prior to
disposal.
[0004] Prior to 1981, when the first large-scale dewatering containers were placed into
service, the aforementioned types of wet wastes were mostly solidified by, for example,
admixing them with dry cement powder in disposable steel drums. However, such solidification
methods have unsolved problems, including achieving structural integrity, void spaces
above the solidified block in a corrodible container, waste parts that are not fully
encapsulated, and pasty or unsolidified materials. The pertinent relationships between
waste media shape, size, chemical reactions, full-scale thermal effects, and waste
media structure remain unsolved for the solidification of radioactive wastes in a
container over the three hundred year design life of the storage regimen.
[0005] The driving factor behind the recent use of waste dewatering is economics. The availability
of landfill disposal sites is clouded with political uncertainty, and the transportation
costs to the few available disposal sites can be expected to increase with each new
regulatory overlay. The result is the need for more waste-volume efficient methods
of disposal or on-site storage, and in this regard dewatering processes are most attractive.
Dewatered wastes need not undergo the volume expansion that solidification technologies
require: instead of adding solid material to physically or chemically entrap or react
with the water within the container, the water is removed from the container. Additionally,
the dewatering process requires less plant floor space, capital investment, and no
dusty, corrosive, or hazardous chemicals. The main mitigating circumstances against
waste dewatering in the past have been changing regulations and operational uncertainty
regarding the degree and amount of residual free standing water left in the container.
Such free standing water is a potential vehicle for isotopic leaching, should the
container fail or be punctured during transport, storage, or burial.
[0006] Prior to the free standing water criteria specified by the State of South Carolina
in 1980, dewatering containers were simply thin gauge carbon steel liners with some
cartridge filters unscientifically placed on the bottom. The 1980 free standing water
criteria quickly illustrated a lack of understanding of the dewatering mechanisms
because the containers, dewatering tests, and procedures changed rapidly. Bead resin
containers were designed with conical bottoms and low point drains or suction configurations.
A diaphragm pump was typically used to remove free standing water. Powdered resin
containers were designed with several levels of cartridge filters.
[0007] It is expected that the use of resin dewatering will increase due to a number of
reasons. Many plants are finding it is more cost effective to not regenerate their
deep bed condensate polisher resins, and instead they directly dispose of the resins
after one use. A significant increase in bead resin volumes per plant results. Bead
resin volumes are also increasing due to the use of portable demineralizers in place
of evaporators. The use of powdered resins is increasing due to closer attention to
power plant water chemistry. Powdered ion exchange resins are increasingly being mixed
with fibrous filter aids to help alleviate resin intrusion into the reactor cooling
water.
[0008] Prior testing and certification procedures have been based upon representative waste
media and have not considered the range of waste forms that occur in the field, nor
the permanent storage conditions. Prior dewatering methods did not lend themselves
to defined endpoints: the duration of the pumping cycle was simply extended until
a subjective empirical endpoint, e.g., no apparent leakage from a punctured representative
container, was observed. Thermodynamic considerations, such as condensing cycles within
the container during transport, storage, or burial, have not previously been addressed.
Nor have chemical form effects been addressed. An understanding of dewatering mechanisms
leading to the production of consistent results has not been developed or achieved.
In at least one case, an extrapolation of free standing water versus drainage time
has been made using specific test results. This method was mathematically unsound
and unrepresentative of the actual variety of waste forms. As a result, some of the
liners punctured during field tests and at burial sites have been found with unacceptable
amounts of free standing water. Moreover, an understanding of the interrelations between
the waste characteristics and internal container piping was not developed. As a consequence,
compliance with the free standing water requirements of 10 C.F.R. Part 61 for ion
exchange resins and other liquid treatment media cannot be assured with prior art
dewatering systems.
Summary of the Invention
[0009] The invention provides a method of predictably dewatering a slurry that contains
radioactive particles to a condition for safe permanent storage. Interstitial water
is removed from the slurry, and then a sufficient quantity of adsorbed water is removed
from the particles so that at the permanent storage temperature the particles will
be just unsaturated with respect to adsorbed water. In other words, the dewatering
endpoint is set to at least unsaturate the particles at the permanent storage temperature.
This minimum volume of adsorbed water removal is necessary to assure the subsequent
uptake of any condensed water that develops during storage in a sealed container.
An upper dewatering endpoint is preferably set so that the volume of adsorbed water
removed from the particles does not excessively unsaturate the particles, so that
the sealed storage container that eventually confines the dewatered particles will
not burst if the particles later become exposed to ambient water or water vapor. This
upper dewatering limit is both particle- and container-specific and is set to assure
that any increase in particle volume, if the particular particles become further hydrated
at the permanent storage temperature, will not exceed the volume of compressible gas,
typically air but alternatively an inert gas, in the particular container.
[0010] Liquid treatment media particles such as bead type ion exchange resins, powdered
type ion exchange resins, filter aid materials, carbon particles, zeolites, filter
sand, diatomaceous earth, anthracite particles, and sludges can be dewatered by the
subject method, as can heterogeneous mixtures thereof. The slurry preferably includes
particles ranging in diameter from about 0.1 to about 1000 microns, with an average
diameter of greater than 20 microns. To unsaturate the particles at the permanent
storage temperature, the volume of adsorbed water removed from the particles is at
least equal to
(Q
P/ΔH)ρ
wherein Q
P is the difference in particle heat content between the dewatering temperature and
the permanent storage temperature, ΔH is the average of the water heat of vaporization
at the dewatering temperature and at the permanent storage temperature, and ρ is the
density of water. The total particle heat content, Q
P, available to produce condensate can be determined as follows:
Q
P = V
Pρ
PC
P(T
P - T
∞)
wherein V
P is the volume of the particles, ρ
P is the density of the particles, C
P is the heat capacity of the particles, T
P is the temperature of the particles at the transition when substantially all interstitial
water has been removed and the removal of adsorbed water commences, and T
∞ is the ambient permanent storage temperature (typically 55°F for the underground
disposal sites). The heat capacity of the particles, C
P, should be determined by considering molar fractions of the component heat capacities
as follows:
C
P = X
H20C
PH20+ X
CHEMC
PCHEM + X
SUBC
PSub
wherein the X terms represent the molar fractions of adsorbed water (X
H20), chemical salts (X
CHEM), and the particle substrate (X
Sub) in the particles, and the C
P terms represent the heat capacities of the adsorbed water, chemical salts, and particle
substrate, respectively.
[0011] A safe upper limit, in terms of volume of adsorbed water removed from the particles,
is also provided for the dewatering process. By regulation the dewatered radioactive
particles must be sealed in a disposable container for permanent storage lasting 300
or more years. Pursuant to this invention, the volume of adsorbed water removed from
the particles should not excessively unsaturate the particles such that any swelling
of the particles - should the container become breached during handling or storage,
exposing the particles to ambient water or water vapor - will not exceed the volume
of compressible gas provided in the disposal container.
[0012] The disclosed dewatering endpoints are applicable no matter how the removal of adsorbed
water from the particles is effected. The subject method is illustrated by way of
an embodiment in which the adsorbed water is evaporated by contacting the particles
with low humidity air. The free standing component of the interstitial water is first
pumped from the slurry, and then low humidity air is passed through the resulting
particle bed to remove substantially all of the remaining interstitial water. The
adsorbed water is preferably removed using a circulating air system. During this drying
stage, low humidity air is passed uniformly through the particle bed. The air is humidified
as it passes through the particle bed and removes adsorbed water from the particles.
The air is thereafter dried, dehumidified, and circulated through the particle bed
until the requisite volume of adsorbed water is removed from the particles.
[0013] The requisite container- and/or particle-specific endpoints can be monitored by measuring
the volume of water separated from the circulating airstream once the drying stage
has commenced. Preferably the volume of adsorbed water removed from the particle bed
is monitored by measuring the relative humidity of the air exiting the particle bed,
and particle-specific relative humidity endpoints are disclosed for that purpose.
For a particular particle composition and container packing configuration the requisite
dewatering upper limit can be achieved by setting the relative humidity endpoint (%R.H.₂)
within the following constraints:
F
f = (%R.H.₁ - %R.H.₂)(1 - F
f)/(1.394 x 62.36)
wherein F
f represents the volume fraction of compressible gas in the container, %R.H.₁ is the
defined relative humidity endpoint sufficient to just unsaturate the particles at
the permanent storage temperature, %R.H.₂ is the operational dewatering endpoint designed
to prevent burst containers, and the constant (1.394 x 62.36) encompasses the swellable
ion exchange resins of interest.
[0014] The particles can be dewatered to the requisite endpoint prior to transfer into a
disposal container. Significant advantages are achieved by performing at least the
drying stage (and preferably also the removal of interstitial water) within the disposal
container. However, to operationally achieve the requisite endpoint the particles
must be uniformly dewatered within the disposable container. The invention provides
a system includes a vapor distributor for that purpose. The circulating stream of
air or other drying gas can be directed through the particle bed and into the vapor
distributor, or vice versa. The system performance and configuration of the disclosed
vapor distributors are also prescribed in a particle- and container-specific manner
in order to achieve uniform fluid flow through the container contents. For granular
particles varying in diameter from about 150 to about 1000 microns, uniform airflow
is used to dry the particles once the interstitial water has been substantially removed.
For powdered particles varying in diameter from about 0.1 to about 150 microns, uniform
water flow is used to remove substantially all interstitial water from the particles,
and the water volume removed thereafter through the collector(s) is monitored to achieve
the requisite dewatering endpoint. These embodiments of the subject method are precisely
defined in terms of the operational parameters necessary to achieve the uniform gas
or liquid flow through the respective particle beds.
[0015] Another advantage of the uniform airflow is that significant packing of the particles
occurs within the container. At least some of the resulting container capacity can
be utilized to advantage. For inelastic particles such as zeolites, additional radioactive
particles can be introduced to substantially fill the disposal container prior to,
during, or after the drying stage. If introduced subsequent to the defined drying
stage, the introduced particles must also be at least unsaturated with respect to
adsorbed water at the permanent storage temperature. Shrinkable/swellable particles
such as ion exchange resins will, in addition, undergo some volume reduction as they
are dried to the point of being just unsaturated at the permanent storage temperature,
particularly when the particle temperature at the commencement of the drying stage
is significantly higher than the permanent storage temperature. In such circumstances,
the particles dewatered within the container and any additional particles introduced
therafter must not be excessively unsaturated, as defined above, and so the dewatering
upper endpoint and the volume of container freeboard must be selected in concert to
assure safe disposal.
[0016] In an alternative embodiment, many of the above advantages are achieved by simply
bringing the slurry containing radioactive particles to or just below the permanent
storage temperature prior to removing substantially all interstitial water from the
slurry. Given a typical six-foot disposal container with one-half inch freeboard,
the just unsaturated endpoint can be achieved by dropping the slurry temperature to
no more than 4 or 5 degress below the 55°F permanent storage temperature prior to
pumping, draining, or blowing out the interstitial water.
[0017] Systems and apparatuses for dewatering nuclear wastes are also provided. In one embodiment,
a disposable container with a top region and a bottom region is provided with a waste
influent port for introducing a slurry of radioactive particles into the container
bottom region and with an air inlet port for introducing relatively dry air into the
container top region. A vapor collector manifold is selectively disposed in the container
bottom region to draw air uniformly through the particle bed. A vapor outlet port,
connected to the vapor collector manifold, is provided to remove the humidified air
that has passed through the particle bed from the container.
Brief Description of the Drawings
[0018]
FIGURE 1 is a schematic diagram showing a preferred embodiment of the dewatering system
of the present invention that employs a recirculating airstream;
FIGURE 2 is a schematic vertical section through a flat-bottomed disposable container
showing the disposition of a dewatering apparatus suitable for dewatering bead type
ion exchange resins;
FIGURE 3 is a view similar to FIGURE 2, indicating the inflow of wet radioactive particles
into the container;
FIGURE 4 is a view similar to FIGURE 2, showing the circulation of air into the container,
through the particle bed, into the vapor collector manifold, and out of the container;
FIGURE 5 is a sectional view taken along section line 5-5 in FIGURE 8;
FIGURE 6 is a detailed elevation view in partial cross section similar to FIGURE 2
showing a disposable container fitted with a vapor collector manifold suitable for
dewatering bead-type ion exchange resins;
FIGURE 7 is a section taken along section line 7-7 in FIGURE 6;
FIGURE 8 is a section taken along section line 8-8 in FIGURE 7;
FIGURE 9 is an elevation view in partial cross section of a disposable container showing
the arrangement and disposition of a vapor collector assembly suitable for dewatering
powdered-type ion exchange resins;
FIGURE 10 is a section taken along section lines 10-10 in FIGURE 9;
FIGURE 11 is a partially cutaway view taken along section line 11-11 in FIGURE 10;
FIGURE 12 is a view similar to FIGURE 3, showing undesirable air channeling down the
inner sidewalls of the container;
FIGURE 13 is a view similar to FIGURE 4, showing the nonuniform air circulation that
results from insufficient pressure drop across the bed of solids and/or collector
near the vapor collector manifold;
FIGURE 14 is a view similar to FIGURE 5, showing the blank areas that tend to develop
above the vapor collector manifold where there is insufficient pressure drop across
the bed of solids;
FIGURE 15 is a graph of friction factor versus Reynold's number for a fluid passing
through a bed of solids;
FIGURE 16 is a multi-dimensional graph showing a typical operating region A-B-C-D
from which a vapor collector manifold or assembly can be custom designed for specific
applications;
FIGURE 17 is a graph similar to FIGURE 16, showing a particular test result;
FIGURE 18 presents two typical psychrometric operating curves along with numerical
coordinates as discussed in the specification;
FIGURE 19 is a graph showing cation resin water vapor/vapor sorption to crosslinking
curves;
FIGURE 20 presents additional water/vapor sorption curves, for different constituents
of the ion exchange resin's adsorbed water; and
FIGURE 21 is a graph that presents typical processing endpoint curves of the present
invention.
Detailed Description of the Preferred Embodiments
[0019] Referring to FIGURE 1, the dewatering process of the present invention preferably
incorporates a circulating air system. In this representative embodiment, a disposable
container 10 is provided for dewatering a slurry of radioactive particles to a condition
for permanent storage. Air is continuously circulated in a loop from a blower 14,
to and through the container 10 that houses the radioactive particles, through a water
separator 16, and back to the blower 14.
[0020] The blower 14 supplies air at a temperature selected to facilitate drying of the
radioactive particles in the container 10. The blower 14 is the source of heat input
to the circulating air. The blower's transmitted heat necessarily follows from its
work of pulling a suction on the container 10 and then compressing the air. The heat
of compression transmitted to the air is used to benefit since the air entering the
blower 14 is water saturated, having been cooled to the dewpoint in the water separator
16. The blower 14 heats the airstream and thereby dehumidifies and raises its water
carrying capacity. The blower 14 is equipped with temperature instrumentation, not
shown, so that the blower 14 will shut down automatically at high temperatures. This
automatic shutoff is provided because the polymers that may be used in and within
the container 10 will lose their integrity at high temperatures, e.g., above 170°F
for polyethylene. Also, anion resins will tend to degrade at temperatures above 170°F,
e.g., at 200°F for several hours. Furthermore, duplex steels that may be used in the
container 10 tend to lose their corrosion resistance at temperatures above 170°F.
[0021] Heated, dehumidified air is discharged from the blower 14 through a conduit 18 to
a filter 20 and thence through another conduit 18 into the container 10. The filter
20 includes a series of oil separators, not shown, that remove any oil that was injected
into the dehumidified airstream by the blower 14. The filter 20 is provided because
oil is incompatible with polyethylene and other polymers that may be used in the container
10.
[0022] The container 10 contains an apparatus, described in detail below, for causing the
airstream to pass uniformly through the slurry. The air is humidified as it passes
through and removes water from the slurry. The humidified air is exhausted from the
container 10 and circulated via conduit 22 through a relative humidity meter 24 to
the water separator 16. A water chiller 26 associated with the water separator 16
cools the humidified airstream as it passes through the water separator 16. Water
28 that condenses from the chilled air is removed from the water separator 16 via
conduit 29 by a dewater pump 30. The dried air that leaves the water separator 16
is drawn through conduit 31 into the blower 14, heated and thereby dehumidified, and
recirculated through the bead resin container 10. When the meter 24 indicates that
the relative humidity of the airstream leaving the container 10 has fallen to a preselected
value (or another quantifiable process endpoint has been achieved as described below),
the blower 14, dewater pump 30, and water chiller 26 are shut down. The container
10 is then sealed for transport and permanent disposal.
[0023] Referring now to FIGURE 2, a suitable disposable container 10 can be a disposable
drum that has an outer shell 32 made of any conventional material. A waste influent
port 34 is provided for introducing the wet radioactive particles into the container
10. A deflection plate 38 provides distribution. An air inlet port 36 is provided
for introducing air from the blower 14, not shown in this view, into the top of the
container 10. Uniform airflow across the top of the slurry bed can be facilitated
by providing a deflection plate (not shown) at the delivery end of the air inlet port
36. A vapor collector manifold 40 is selectively disposed on the flat bottom 41 of
the container 10. The vapor collector manifold 40 is connected by a duct 42 to a vapor
outlet port 44. The waste influent port 34, air inlet port 36, and vapor outlet port
44 are preferably grouped together in a dewatering fill head 46 that can be reversibly
inserted into the top of the container 10 to temporarily seal the container, and thereby
facilitate the containment of radioactive particulates, during the dewatering process.
The dewatering fill head 46 is removed and the duct 42 is uncoupled after dewatering
is accomplished. The container 10 is then permanently sealed.
[0024] Referring to FIGURE 3, a sufficient volume of the radioactive waste media slurry
48 is introduced through the waste influent port 34, as indicated by arrow 50, to
surround and cover the vapor collector manifold 40 at the bottom of the container
10. The bottom region of the container 10 can be almost completely filled with the
slurry 48, leaving only an air space 54 in the top region of the container 10 sufficient
for the air inlet port 36 to distribute pressurized air over the upper surface 56
of the slurry bed 48. The dewater pump 30 is then turned on, and the bulk of the free
standing water is aspirated through the vapor collector manifold 40, duct 42, vapor
outlet port 44, and thence to the dewater pump 30 as shown in FIG. 1. Thereafter the
particle bed 48 is air dried in accordance with this disclosure.
[0025] Referring to FIGURES 4 and 5, the circulation of air through the particle bed 48
should be uniform across the entire cross section of the container 10. Dehumidified
air from the blower 14 (see FIG. 1) is discharged through the air inlet port 36 into
the air space 54. A deflection plate on the delivery end of the air inlet port 36
can serve to radially distribute the incoming air, indicated by arrows 58, over the
upper surface 56 of the waste media bed 48. The distributed air passes from the air
space 54 through the particle bed 48 along paths generally indicated by arrows 60
and thence into the vapor collector manifold 40. The percolating air 60 is humidified
as the slurry 48 gives up its interstitial and adsorbed waters to the relatively dry
air 60. The now humidified air, indicated by arrows 62, is collected by the vapor
collector manifold 40 and discharged via duct 42 through the vapor outlet port 44.
A respresentative vapor collector manifold 40, as described below, has a plurality
of conduits 64 that radiate in a planar fashion from a header 66 positioned diametrically
across the floor 41 of the container 10. Air 60 passes from the waste media bed 48
into the vapor collector manifold 40 through a plurality of orifices 68 spaced along
the lengths of the conduits 64. Freestanding water and water vapor are drawn through
the orifices 68, into the channels 70 of the conduits 64, into the header 66, through
a vertical duct 42 and thence through the vapor outlet port 44. The vapor collector
manifold 40 is designed, as described below, so that when the waste media bed 48 is
completely free of free standing water the flow of air 60 through the bed 48 will
be uniform across the entire cross section of the container 10. If the airflow 60
is not uniform, pockets of interstitial water potentially remain in any region of
the resin bed 48 that is not subjected to the airflow 60. The uniform airflow 60 must
also have sufficient driving force to cause migration of the interstitial water to
the container floor 41.
[0026] Referring now to FIGURE 6, a flow interrupter 72 such as an annular ring is preferably
mounted approximately midway down the inner sidewall 74 of container 10 in order to
deflect into the media bed any airstream that preferentially channels down the sidewalls
74. If such an annular ring 72 is not provided the airstream will tend not to flow
uniformly across the entire cross section of the resin bed 48, and a central pocket
of interstitial water 96 may not be subjected to the drying airstream; (see FIG. 12).
[0027] Referring now to FIGURES 6 and 7, a suitable vapor collector manifold 40 for drying
bead-type resins, zeolites, and other water-holding particles can have a central header
66 with a plurality of laterally offset conduits 64 disposed in planar array and resting
on the floor 41 of the container 10. Suitable conduits 64 can be made of three-quarter
inch plastic pipe that has been through-drilled to provide suitably sized orifices
68 at appropriate intervals, as described below, along both sides of each conduit
64. The distal end of each conduit 64 that lies adjacent to the container sidewall
74 is sealed with an end cap or plug 76. The other end of each conduit 64 communicates
through a cross or tee fitting 78 with the header 66, which can suitably be made of
three inch plastic pipe. One end 67 of the header 66 is sealed, and the other end
communicates through an elbow 80 with a duct 42, which can be a flexible plastic tube,
that leads to the vapor outlet port 44.
[0028] The vapor collector manifold 40 should be configured so that its orifices 68 are
distributed in uniformly spaced array across the floor 41 of the bead resin container
10. The orifices 68 must be properly sized to achieve specific flow to pressure drop
relationships with itself and the flow and pressure drop of the fluid in the pipes.
Each vapor collector manifold 40 design has unique maximum and minimum distribution
characteristics corresponding to specific maximum and minimum flow rates for specific
types of waste medias as described below. During the initial stages of the dewatering
process the vapor collector manifold 40 acts in an analogous fashion to the sump pumps
of the prior art to remove free standing water from the slurry bed 48. Thereafter,
the vapor collector manifold 40 serves to draw motive air 60 uniformly across the
entire cross section of the resin bed 48 to remove any remaining unadsorbed, interstitial
water. In the preferred embodiment the dewatering process is thereafter continued
with dry air until a sufficient volume of adsorbed water is removed from the waste
media so that the media bed will act as a desiccant at the permanent storage temperature.
Most preferably, the endpoint of the dewatering process is selected to just unsaturate
the particles with respect to adsorbed water, as described below.
[0029] Referring to FIGURE 8, the orifices 68 in the conduits 64 should be screened so that
they will not become obstructed. Concentrically disposed screening members, for example,
a coarse screen member 82 surrounding a fine screen member 84 of 100-mesh screen,
are preferably wrapped around the conduits 64 to prevent occlusion of the orifices
68 by resin beads and other waste particles.
[0030] Referring now to FIGURE 9, a container 10 for dewatering powdered resins and filter
media must be provided with a tiered series of vapor collector manifolds 40ʹ positioned
one about the other in spaced horizontal array throughout the container bottom region.
As described below, the number of vertically spaced vapor collector manifolds 40ʹ
is dependent on the required fluid pulling distance through the waste media. As the
bed depth over the collector manifold 40ʹ increases the total pressure differential
across the bed also increases. Pulling nearly a full vacuum is the limiting situation
before another collector manifold 40ʹ would be required. Several tiers of vapor collector
manifolds 40ʹ can be interconnected by vertical supporting members 86 to form a self-supported
vapor collector assembly 88 within the container 10. The vertical supports 86 can
be made of three-quarter inch or one and one-half inch plastic pipes fitted with bottom
caps 90 to prevent scoring the container floor 41. The shape and outer shell 32 construction
of the powdered media container 10 can be essentially as described above. A plurality
of vapor outlet ports 44, one for each of the several vapor collector manifolds 40ʹ,
are provided in the dewatering fill head 46. In this embodiment four vapor collector
manifolds 40ʹ are positioned in tiered horizontal array within the container 10, one
manifold 40ʹ near the container floor 41 and the remaining three manifolds 40ʹ at
approximately equally spaced horizontal levels within the container bottom region.
Each of the vapor collector manifolds 40ʹ is an independent system of ducts that has
a central header 66ʹ with a plurality of laterally offset conduits 64ʹ. The distal
end of each conduit 64ʹ is sealed by a plug 92 where it attaches to a vertical supporting
member 86. One end of each header 66ʹ is likewise sealed; the other end communicates
with a duct 42 that leads to one of the vapor outlet ports 44. The conduits 64ʹ and
also the headers 66ʹ have a multiplicity of spaced orifices, not shown in this view.
The conduits 64ʹ and headers 66ʹ are wrapped with a filtering member 94 (shown in
FIGURE 11) that prevents the orifices from becoming occluded by fine waste particles.
Humidified air is drawn through the filters 94 and orifices into and through conduits
64ʹ and header 66ʹ, through a duct 42, and thence through a vapor outlet port 44.
[0031] Referring now to FIGURES 9 and 10, the alignments of the headers 66ʹ and laterals
64ʹ of the several vapor collector manifolds 40ʹ are preferably offset by 90° in alternating
tiers of the vapor collector assembly 88. Thus, in this embodiment the diagonal axis
defined by the header 66ʹ of each of the first, counting from top to bottom, and third
vapor collector manifolds 40ʹ is disposed perpendicularly with respect to the diagonal
axes of the second and fourth vapor collector manifolds 40ʹ in the vapor collector
assembly 88. The offsetting alignments of the vapor collector manifolds 40ʹ at successive
tiers within the container bottom region facilitates uniform dewatering by minimizing
cracking in the powdered media bed.
[0032] In operation, the bottom container region is filled with powdered media slurry through
the waste influent port 34 so that the vapor collector assembly 88 is surrounded and
covered by the slurry. A high water level is initially maintained in the container
10. As powdered media slurry is introduced into the container 10 excess water is removed
via suction applied to the topmost collector manifold 40ʹ by the dewater pump 30.
When the container 10 is apparently full of solids the slurry feed is stopped. The
bulk water is pumped out using the dewater pump 30 utilizing all of the vapor collector
manifolds 40ʹ in the container 10. As the system suction drops to a predetermined
point the topmost collector 40ʹ is shut off and suction is continued on the remaining
collectors 40ʹ. The next lower collector 40ʹ is also shut off at a predetermined pressure,
and so on until only the bottom collector 40ʹ remains functioning. At the beginning
of the water removal the powdered media will tend to shrink, and small amounts of
slurry may be added to make up the volume. After the bulk water is removed and the
suction pressure on the lowermost collector 40ʹ drops to a predetermined level, then
all collectors 40ʹ are opened and the blower 14 is started. More of the interstitial
water is quickly removed and the drying process begins. When nearly all of the interstitial
water is removed the powdered media will begin to crack and slough away from the container
sidewall 74 and vapor collector assembly 88. The air passing through these cracks
removes water from the adjacent media. The entire process is stopped when the predetermined
endpoint is reached.
[0033] Referring to FIGURE 11, the conduits 64ʹ and also the headers 66ʹ are preferably
through-drilled at suitable intervals to produce alternating side- to-side and top-to-bottom
orifices 68. The conduits 64ʹ and header 66ʹ are wrapped with one micron filtering
members 94 to prevent powdered media particles from occluding or passing through the
orifices 68.
[0034] This dewatering system will meet or exceed all established free standing water criteria
for shipment and disposal of radioactive ion exchange resins. More specifically, this
dewatering system has been designed and tested to consistently meet the free standing
water requirements of 10 C.F.R. Part 61 for ion exchange resins and other liquid treatment
media. Predictable performance results are achieved using this system over the broad
spectrum of waste characteristics possible with ion exchange resins and other liquid
treatment media. Other current dewatering systems do not consistently meet these requirements.
[0035] This invention provides a method and apparatus for dewatering many types of particulate
waste forms, including bead type ion exchange resins from sources such as deep bed
condensate systems, radwaste treatment, borated water control, reactor water cleanup,
and fuel pool cleaning. Powdered ion exchange resins (e.g., POWDEX) can also be dewatered
with this system, as can filter aids such as those sold under the trademarks CELITE
and FIBRA-CEL. Moreover, other liquid treatment media such as activated carbon particles,
inorganic zeolites, filter sand, anthracite particles, and odd forms of ionic exchange
resins that may occur from one-time site jobs can be dewatered using this method and
apparatus. Furthermore, powdered mixtures of ion exchange resins, activated carbon
particles, and filter aids (e.g., EPIFLOC, ENVIROSORB, and ECODEX) from condensate
polishers and radwaste treatment systems can be dewatered in accordance with this
disclosure, as can sludges from sump or pool bottoms, decon scale, and abrasive cleaners.
By sludges is meant the heterogeneous particulate mixtures that settle out in receiving
tanks, sumps, and other low velocity flow regions. All of the aforementioned liquid
treatment media, as well as other particles whose physical properties meet the parameters
described with respect to the computational models and test data disclosed below,
can be dewatered using the method and apparatus of the present invention.
[0036] Some definitions are necessary for an understanding of the present dewatering method:
[0037] Interstitial water is the water that surrounds the particles in the void space of
the particle bed.
[0038] Free standing water is the interstitial water that freely gravity drains from a bed
of particles.
[0039] Adsorbed water includes the water bound, e.g., by chemical solvation or by weak charge
interactions, to the surfaces of particles such as ion exchange resins, inorganic
zeolites, and other medias with chemically reactive surfaces. For the purposes of
this disclosure, the term adsorbed water also refers to the water held by pore diffusion
within micropores in particles such as activated carbon particles.
[0040] Water vapor is the gaseous phase of water.
[0041] The method of the present invention applies a unique two-part approach to dewater
particulate radwastes. Both fluid dynamic and thermodynamic analyses are applied
to define operating parameters and endpoints of the dewatering process. The fluid
dynamic methods apply to either, or both, liquid and gaseous water and air. Fluid
dynamics does not apply to adsorbed water until the adsorbed water has been thermodynamically
separated (evaporated) from the particles, except that air should be distributed uniformly
through the media bed during the drying stage. Fluid dynamics applies to the various
types of water as follows: The free standing water is simply pumped down, as it easily
drains down from the particles. The interstitial water, which may be slowly draining
or stuck up in the particles, is brought down by applying sufficient differential
pressure of uniformly flowing air. At this point there is a two phase (gas and liquid)
flow of air and water. Once the interstitial water has been substantially removed,
then the adsorbed water begins to evaporate into the heated (dehumidified) airstream.
The heated air is uniformly distributed through the particle bed pursuant to the fluid
dynamic methodology of this invention.
[0042] Thermodynamics only applies to adsorbed water and water vapor. The thermodynamic
applications can be considered in two parts: First, the mechanical system involving
air and its capacity to transport water vapor through each part of the system must
be considered with respect to fundamental mechanical heat input, heat transfer, and
psychrometry. Then the chemical thermodynamics of the adsorbed water as it applies
to various types of ion exchange resins and other media, and their varied chemistries,
must be considered in order to determine the degree of particle drying required to
meet the burial environment's free standing water criteria; in other words, finding
the drying endpoint. The two parts interact where the humidity of the airstream is
in equilibrium with the adsorbed water of the resin. A measurement of the air humidity
flowing through a known resin type is a direct measure of that resin's water uptake
capacity.
[0043] The actual physical characteristics of the waste media must be addressed in order
to properly dewater waste treatment media. An over whelming percentage of the wet
wastes currently generated from nuclear reactors are bead and powdered ion exchange
resins. These resin types are each relatively homogeneous when they are new. New resins
have the following characteristics:

[0044] However, liquid treatment media may be subjected to forces that cause significant
physical alteration during use, depending upon the system design and operation of
a particular powerplant. For example, the ion exchange resin from a reactor coolant
cleaning system can be in a much different condition than the same type of resin from
a condensate polisher. Also, one waste type can be admixed with another significantly
different type, for example, a combination of bead resins with powdered resins, thereby
drastically changing the average effective size and shape of the waste particles to
be dewatered. As another example, the transfer of waste media through high fluid shear
pumps, long lengths of pipe, or tight fittings can considerably reduce the effective
particle size and shape because of particle breakage. A change in the waste holdup
tank, or a sump or pool draw point, can also change the waste characteristics. If
the draw on a waste hold tank is switched from the side to the bottom, then finer
settled particles could be introduced into the dewatering apparatus, thereby significantly
altering the waste's dewatering characteristics. Chemical effects on the waste media
can also seriously hinder the dewatering characteristics. For example, a powdered
or bead-type ion exchange resin that has been severely decrosslinked from repeated
regenerations or exposure to oxidizing decontamination solutions has extremely reduced
structural properties. After such decrosslinking, the strength of bead resins can
deteriorate from being able to bear the weight of a person to being easily crushable
with one's fingers. Any such decrease in the structural strength of the resin particles
must be considered because resin crushed under the weight of a six-foot deep solids
bed could effectively block the passage of free standing water into the vapor collector
manifold.
[0045] Considering the potential damaging effects resulting from the aforementioned plant
operations, the on-site condition of the waste media can be significantly different
from the ideal values of Table 1. By combining a knowledge of the standard fines content
in new resins with an estimate of the fines generation rate from normal operations
and from potential abberational operations, worst case scenarios can be generated,
as shown in Table 2.

[0046] The actual physical characteristics of the waste media are addressed in the appended
Calculations section, wherein the waste characterization recited in Tables 1 and 2
are related to computational methods for determining appropriate vapor collector manifold
or assembly configurations as well as processing parameters and endpoints in order
to properly dewater waste treatment media.
[0047] The initial testing and design hypothesis was based on a nearly pure fluid dynamics
approach, as the fundamentals of fluid flow under a differential pressure, gravity
effects and fluid distribution are as applicable to a bed of solids as they are to
pipe flow. Chemical, surface phenomena and absorption/desorption effects were considered
negligible or nonexistent at first because: (1) the surface chemical structure (mostly
polystyrene) of ion exchange resin is hydrophobic, (2) ion exchange resins that are
not fully oxidized are mechanically very stable, (3) the adsorbed water in the ion
exchange resin is there due to chemical solution effects with fixed interior positive
or negative charges that do not affect the exterior of the resin, and (4) if there
were other hydration effects, they would not become obvious during the testing unless
they were unmasked by the removal of all the unadsorbed, free standing and interstitial
water. This initial hypothesis proved beneficial with regard to the aforementioned
item 4. Several test and equipment modification iterations led to the result that
all the free water was being removed by the fluid dynamics approach. The combination
of a thermodynamic and resin water/water vapor sorption phenomena was then unmasked.
At that point, the engineering methods shifted to a material drying approach on the
premise that dewatered ion exchange resins contained adsorbed water and can behave
like desiccants once that adsorbed water is removed.
[0048] With regard to fluid dynamics, using a purely fluid dynamics approach leads to two
phase (liquid and gas) flow in the resin and the necessity of pulling out pockets
of free standing and interstitial water. Under a fluid dynamics hypothesis, all of
the free standing water is pulled out when subjected to sufficient uniform differential
pressure across the resin. This is basically the mechanical portion of the process.
Given the hydrophobic nature of the resin surface and the chemical solution effects
of the adsorbed water, there should be a definite conclusion to the mechanical dewatering
portion of the dewatering process. Any further dewatering would have to be a nonmechanical
method such as evaporation, chemical enhancement, or solvent extraction; see the Thermodynamics
discussion below.
[0049] Carrying the fluid dynamics hypothesis of dewatering to its conclusion leads to
the design being based on two phase flow. Unfortunately, two phase flow in a bed of
solids, particularly in the size range of the subject media treatment particles, is
not empirically well founded. Hence, the need for confirming test data. In fact, most
single phase flow is empirically more well founded with larger sized solids and higher
flow rates. The prior art has not used any engineering hypothesis and has instead
relied on single point testing for conclusions to be applied to all field conditions.
This approach has not worked well. On the other hand, testing all possible waste types
and forms is unrealistic. Hence, the all encompassing analytical model set forth in
the appended Calculations section was developed and proved by single point testing.
[0050] The flow of fluid through a bed of solids and then the residual free standing water
is based on an interplay of the following resin characteristics: resin effective diameter;
the shape of the resin; the packing or effective void volume of the resin; and the
depth of the resin bed. The relative importance of each of these factors is discussed
in the Calculations section. The different characteristics of the resin cannot be
encompassed unless there is a good understanding of the hydraulic performance of the
collector manifold and pumping system. The hydraulic factors to be considered are
the following: a uniform minimum velocity through the bed of solids; the vapor collector
manifold has design limits for achieving the uniform velocity via uniform collection;
the losses in the pump and piping system external to the container; performance curve
of the blower; and container design effect on flow paths. The factors cited above
for both resin characteristics and hydraulic factors must also be combined with the
state of the motive fluid that is applying the differential pressure to the free standing
and interstitial water. Therefore, the following must also be considered: the temperature
of the fluid moving through the bed of solids; the viscosity of the fluid; the molecular
weight of the fluid; and the compressibility of the fluid. Thus, there are a total
of thirteen major factors affecting the fluid dynamics hypothesis, and the relationships
between all of these factors are defined in the appended Calculations section as they
apply to field conditions. Full scale test data has been used to verify the model.
The fluids dynamics hypothesis has proven to be substantially correct under field
testing conditions.
[0051] With regard to thermodynamics, ion exchange resins contain a considerable amount
of adsorbed water, on the order of 35 to 65 weight percent, even when they have no
interstitial water. The adsorbed water has unique chemical solution characteristics
since only one of the plus or minus charged ions in the solution is free to move while
the other charged ion is fixed to the plastic bead. The plastic resin itself is hydrophobic
and the adsorbed water is there due to chemical solution effect. Therefore the adsorbed
water has evaporation properties unique to the chemical form of the waste's adsorbed
water. Since the waste can be expected to undergo substantial temperature changes
during processing, transport, and storage, the ability of the adsorbed water to leave
the resin must be addressed.
[0052] The thermodynamic properties also apply to nonresinous particles with different water
holding phenomena. While ion exchange resins hold water predominantly with an adsorption
mechanism, other rigid, less chemical solution oriented particles, such as zeolites
or activated carbon, hold water by pore diffusion and, to a much lesser extent, absorption.
All such water holding mechanisms represent a thermodynamic resistance to releasing
water. That resistance can be used to preclude the formation of free water in the
burial condition despite the mechanism causing that resistance.
[0053] The thermodynamics and the flow of air/water vapor mixtures is known. The water uptake
capabilities, or desiccant effects, of ion exchange resins are also generally known.
The thermodynamic hypothesis has several points: Thermal and fluid dynamics are related
only with respect to even distribution of the drying air for the purpose of removing
some of the adsorbed water. It is more efficient to remove free standing water by
mechanical means (fluid flow) than by evaporation (thermodynamics). There is an air/water
vapor to resin retained water equilibrium point that signals the desired drying endpoint.
The dryness of the resin or other media should correspond to not generating free water
in the burial environmental conditions.
[0054] The predictable drying of a material depends on the state of the drying fluid and
the state of the fluid to be dried. Compared to the state of the solutions in the
waste media slurry, the state of the drying air is relatively straightforward. Psychrometric
charts and fundamental heat transfer relations can be applied to forecast the expected
generation of free water from air and the drying capacity of the air flowing through
the waste media. Specialty data must be applied to the removal of adsorbed water from
ion exchange resins. From that data the following factors have been found to effect
the drying of various resins: the moisture content of the resins; chemistry of the
retained water; capacity or number of functional exchange sites remaining on the resin;
and degree of crosslinking of the resin's polymer structure. There are an infinite
number of combinations of the factors listed above. It was recognized early in the
testing that the thermodynamic aspects of the dewatering system would have to be oriented
to the worst case scenario, as complicated resin analysis at a power plant is not
economically feasible.
Testing
[0055] Extensive testing has been conducted in order to qualify the dewatering system of
this invention to the free standing water requirements of 10 C.F.R. 61 for both bead
and powdered media. The regulatory limit for free standing water in a high integrity
container has been established at 1.0% of the waste volume by 10 C.F.R. 61, which
also establishes that the test methods contained in ANSI 55.1 are to be used to detect
the presence of free water. The method and apparatus of this invention have performed
well within these limits, particularly with regard to the absence of free water over
the expected chemical and physical range of the waste processes. This range in properties
of the resins has been considered in the testing program, the equipment design, and
the operating parameters for this system.
[0056] The bead resins used in the test program were selected to be within the resin properties
that are expected to be encountered in the field. The equipment design and the operating
parameters which have been established for this equipment were selected to preclude
the presence of free water for normal waste materials and to detect abnormal, or worst-case,
materials prior to dewatering. In addition, in order to assure compliance with the
regulatory limits with the waste stream variations which will be encountered in the
field, an initial acceptance criteria of 0.1% free water was imposed for the qualification
tests. As the testing progressed the solving of various fluids and thermodynamic phenomena
led to the practical result of zero free water at the relatively cool burial temperature.
[0057] The bead resins used in the testing program were of two types, spent anion resins
and new, off-specification cation resins. The anion resins were representative of
bead resins which have been regenerated many times and fouled with large organic molecules.
They tend to be oxidized with less crosslinking and are of a smaller average particle
size. The cation resins on the other hand are representative of bead resins which
have not been regenerated, are very spherical, and are on the upper end of the scale
as far as size and shape. The cation resins are thus more representative of the bead
resins which will be encountered in the field. With the possible exception of deep
bed condensate polishers, most resins are not regenerated at nuclear power plants.
For this reason, the cation resins were used extensively to establish system design
and operating parameters, and because their physical and chemical characteristics
were better known. Dewatering of the anion resins was subsequently solved as a worst
case basis.
[0058] The powdered resins used in the testing program were spent and of the type sold under
the trademarks ECODEX or EPIFLOC. The filter aid present in these materials tends
to hold water more readily than the resin, making them the most difficult of the powdered
resins to dewater. Powdered media (e.g., POWDEX, ECODEX, and EPIFLOC) have granule
diameters averaging 0.0015 inches as compared to about 0.02 inches for bead type resins.
Flow through a bed of powdered media is affected by the presence of fibrous material.
The fiber is intended to enhance filterability of the precoat. The consequence in
dewatering is a change from a rigid bed of solids to a spongy and compressible bed.
With regard to powdered media, the approach has been to do the best possible job removing
the interstitial water, recognizing that shrinkage during' dewatering will cause sloughing
and random cracking. To compensate for the randomness of the media sloughing, water
removal has been enhanced through the use of air drying techniques. The result of
this approach has been shorter and more thorough dewatering than previously available.
[0059] The physical measurements which have been taken over the course of the testing program
show good correlation to the analytical methods as presented in the Calculations section.
Powdered resins have been successfully dewatered in the qualificational testing program.
Bead resins have also been successfully dewatered. Cation resins were dewatered, producing
no drainage of free water following an eight hour dewatering cycle. Regenerated anion
bead resin beads took no more than 16 hours to dewater.
CALCULATIONS
Introduction
[0061] The method of the present invention employs a two-part approach to dewater radioactive
particles to a condition satisfactory for permanent storage. Both fluid dynamic and
thermodynamic engineering analyses must be considered in order to define the operating
requirements of such a dewatering system. Fluid dynamic analyses are used to effect
the complete removal of unadsorbed, free standing and interstitial water from the
bed of radioactive particles and to uniformly air-dry the particles thereafter. Thermodynamic
analyses are used to insure that free standing water does not thereafter develop as
a result of condensation cycles that result from temperature fluctuations during transport,
storage, and disposal.
FLUID DYNAMICS
[0062] Solving the fluid dynamics problem involves three principal analyses: (1) the fluid
performance through the bed of solids, (2) the fluid performance of the vapor collector
manifold, and (3) the fluid performance of the mechanical equipment.
Flow Through a Bed of Solids
[0063] Standard fluid flow relationships have been developed for single phase (gas or liquid)
flow in pipes, ducts, and beds of solids. Unfortunately, in the case of granular media
the same relationships have not been developed for two phase (gas and liquid) flow
in a bed of solids. Also, in the case of powdered media, the fluid flow through a
randomly cracked bed of solids is not defined. Nevertheless, there are fundamental
principles which can be drawn upon and verified through testing. The primary goal
is to achieve plug flow through all of the particle bed at a sufficient rate to draw
air through granular media and pull the interstitial water out. Therefore, two items
must be established: (1) the criteria for even flow through the solids, and (2) the
minimum fluid flow (gas for granular media and liquid for powered media) required
to move the interstitial water. All forms of liquid treatment media particles must
be considered.
[0064] The flow of a fluid in a bed of solids depends on the characteristics of the solids.
The pressure drop of a compressible fluid (gases) flowing through a bed of solids
can be expressed as shown in Equation 1.
[0065] Equation 1: p²₁ - p²₂ = (2zRG²T/g
cM)[2f
mL(1-e)²]/s²e³D
p
wherein:
p = the inlet and outlet pressures
z = compressibility factor
R = gas constant
G = gas superficial mass velocity
T = temperature
g
c = gravitational constant
M = molecular weight
f
m = modified friction factor
L = depth of solids
e = interstitial void fraction
s = solid shape factor
D
p = equivalent diameter of the solids, average.
R. H. PERRY & C. H. Chilton,
Chemical Engineers' Handbook, 5th Ed., McGraw-Hill Book Co., pp. 5-52 to 5-54, 1973, expessly incorporated herein
by reference.
[0066] Equation 1 has been found to be very accurate for beds of granular solids similar
to ion exchange media, zeolites, and activated carbon particles where the free liquid
is simply pumped out and sufficient gas flow substantially removes the remaining interstitial
water. Testing has shown good correlation to Equation 1, with an error of less than
1 percent. It is important to note the significance of the media's physical characteristics
in Equation 1. A change in the shape of the particles will affect the terms of sphericity
(s), void fraction (e), effective diameter (D
p), and the modified friction factor (f
m). A small difference in one of these terms can lead to a rate of change in the pressure
drop exceeding a square function.
[0067] It has been determined that the modified friction factor, f
m, is in the laminar flow region for all of the expected waste media forms. As in the
case of fluid flow in a pipe, the modified friction factor is a function of the Reynolds
number except that it must be modified for the flow in a bed of solids. The modified
Reynolds number can be calculated, for gases or liquids, using Equation 2.
[0068] Equation 2: Nʹ
Re = D
pG/µ
wherein:
Nʹ
Re = Modified Reynolds Number
µ = viscosity.
R. H. Perry & C. H. Chilton,
Chemical Engineers' Handbook, 5th Ed., McGraw-Hill Book Co., pp. 5-52, 1973.
[0069] In the turbulent flow range, the friction factor is constant for a given material.
Therefore, the pressure drop is proportional to the flow rate of the air through the
bed of solids. In the laminar flow range, the friction factor is inversely proportional
to a logarithmic relation to the Reynolds number. Therefore, in this case the solids
pressure drop is more highly dependent on the gas flow rate and the gas viscosity.
Since the gas viscosity is dependent on the temperature, the ambient air temperature
in a field case must be considered. The modified friction factor f
m is read off an experimentally determined plot of Nʹ
Re versus f
m as shown in FIGURE 15. R. H. Perry & C. H. Chilton,
Chemical Engineers' Handbook, 5th Ed., McGraw-Hill Book Co., pp. 5-52, 1973.
[0070] The parameters for the physical characteristics of the solids are well founded. The
void fraction and shape factor are tabulated or graphed for shapes varying from nearly
perfect spheres to flakes and odd plastic shapes.
Flow Through Perforated Pipe Distributors
[0071] Perforated pipe distributors are used in water treatment and chemical manufacturing
equipment. Experience has shown the empirical design methods available to be very
accurate. Pressure readings taken during full scale testing have confirmed the accuracy
of these methods. There is an economic trade-off between the capital equipment required
to achieve a minimum velocity through the bed of solids and the extent of the disposable
distributor required in the container.
[0072] The design of the distributors has involved standard orifice and pipe flow calculations.
The key, however, is to determine the criteria for even distribution so as to avoid
potential maldistribution problems that can occur in a bed of solids and around the
pipe distributors. It should be noted that a bed of solids can itself be a means of
distributing a fluid. Therefore, the bed of solids and the distributor are interrelated.
Containers which have been used in the past have had maldistribution problems. It
can take days for the free standing water to migrate to the bottom of a container
of the prior art.
[0073] The vapor collector manifolds used in the representative dewatering containers shown
in the Figures are commonly referred to as of the header and lateral type, with drilled
and screened laterals. The header is the central backbone and the lateral conduits
come out from it. The lateral conduits are designed such that the screen does not
blank off or constrict the orifices when the resin is loaded on top and the fluid
is flowing into them.
[0074] The calculated flow through a bed of solids can be incorporated with the distributor
design calculations since the inlet pressure of the distributor is the bottom pressure
of the bed of solids. The distributor designs for granular or powdered media are based
on gas and liquid fluids, respectively. The orifice equation is summarized in Equation
3.
[0075] Equation 3: w = CYA₂

wherein:
w = flow rate
C = coefficient of discharge
Y - expansion factor
A₂ = orifice cross section area
g
c = gravitational constant
P = upstream and downstream pressures
ρ₁ = upstream density
B = orifice to pipe diameter ratio.
R. H. Perry & C. H. Chilton,
Chemical Engineers' Handbook, 5th Ed., McGraw-Hill Book Co., pp. 5-11, 1973, expressly incorporated herein by
reference.
[0076] The coefficient of discharge, C, is dependent on the orifice Reynolds number and
the ratio of the orifice to pipe diameter. The discharge coefficient is essentially
constant below certain diameter ratios and above certain Reynolds numbers. The expansion
factor, Y, is a function of the ratio of upstream and downstream pressures and the
specific heat ratio of the gas. In the expected operating conditions, Y is equal to
one for both gases and liquids.
[0077] The criteria for the evenness of flow between the highest and lowest flow orifices
in the distributor was arbitrarily set, by experience, at 5% maldistribution. The
degree of distribution can be determined from the ratios of the fluid kinetic energy
(Eq. 4) and friction loss in the lateral ( due to fluid flow) (Eq. 5) to the orifice
pressure drop. The actual percentage of maldistribution results in Equation 6. The
applicable equations are:
[0078] Equation 4: K.E. = aV
i²/2g
c
Equation 5: h
p = [(4fL
c/3D)-1] (V
i²/2g
c)
Equation 6: % maldistribution = 100 [1-

wherein:
K.E. = Kinetic Energy
L
c = length of the longest conduit
V
i = velocity at the lateral inlet
a = average velocity correction factor
h
p = pressure loss across the lateral
f = friction factor of the pipe lateral
D = lateral diameter
h
ol = pressure loss across the first orifice.
R. H. Perry & C. H. Chilton,
Chemical Engineers' Handbook, 5th Ed., McGraw-Hill Book Co., pp. 5-47 to 5-48, 1973.
[0079] The average velocity correction factor, a, is equal to 1.1 for long, straight pipes.
The friction factor, f, is the standard value used for PVC pipe. Equation 6 is valid
only when the orifice coefficient of discharge, C, is constant, as it is within the
constraints stated above. The diameter term, D, in Equation 5 is for circular ducts
or pipe. The hydraulic diameter, D
H, can be used in noncircular applications. An example would be if a plenum arrangement
were used to distribute or collect the fluid. When the hydraulic diameter concept
is used, the head loss equation appropriate to the duct shape is required. Such a
head loss equation can be found in handbooks such as R. H. Perry & C. H. Chitton,
"Chemical Engineers' Handbook," 5th Ed., McGraw-Hill, pp. 5-23 to 5-27, 1973, expressly
incorporated herein by reference.
[0080] The fluid distribution methodology is also applicable to the collector header. The
laterals represent the orifices. This technique can be used to insure a sufficiently
large collector header. If the header is too small, the outer laterals will not receive
a sufficient volume of fluid. The distance between lateral conduits and the distance
between orifices has been established based on economic considerations. There is a
limiting return on the addition of more orifices and laterals. An increase in pressure
drop due to air flow becomes more cost effective. The spacing of the orifices and
laterals are somewhat arbitrary. The main consideration in orifice spacing along the
lateral is the distance between laterals. A balanced square pattern is achieved by
placing the orifices along the lateral at less than one half of the lateral spacing.
The geometry determination is mostly qualitative based on experience. The actual distribution
effects are a combination of the orifice locations and the distribution effect of
the bed of solids. This problem is addressed below.
Distribution Criteria
[0081] There are maximum and minimum effective flow rates for a given distributor design.
If the flow is too low, the fluid will enter the distributor at the point of least
resistance, the center collection point at the header and the vertical riser pipe.
If the flow is too high, the fluid velocity in the lateral at the entrance to the
header will be too great to allow flow in the center of the laterals, the flow would
prefer to enter the outer perimeter of the laterals.
[0082] Most of the dewatering procedure occurs under the effect of two phase, gas and liquid,
flow. The distribution criteria for the combination of the distributor and the solids
can be achieved with single phase flow correlations since the end of the dewatering
procedure is completely gas phase. Initially, the vapor collector manifold geometry
was determined for gas flow through the largest sized bead ion exchange resin. Two
phase flow distribution problems occurred directly above the distributor laterals.
However, the solution was found to be simply to increase the minimum required pressure
drop across the resin by increasing the gas flow rate in the case of granular media.
That approach has been successful. Prior art has been based on water flow without
consideration of any drying criteria.
[0083] FIGURES 4 and 5 illustrate the desirable uniform, plug flow of drying air across
the entire cross section of the container. By way of contrast, FIGURES 13 and 14 illustrate
the effect of insufficient distribution, or pressure drop, across the bed of solids
near the distributor. Blank areas 98 occur above and beside the lateral conduits 64
when there is insufficient pressure drop. The interstitial water in such blank regions
98 tends to increase the effective solids diameter, lower the effective void fraction,
and alter the shape factor. When all of these values change in relation to each other
it can be seen from Equation 1 that the pressure drop across the bed of solids goes
up dramatically. The airstream 60 can preferentially flow around the blank areas 98
above the distributor 40 such that there is an equilibrium between the resistance
to air flow 60 in the solids 48 and the resistance to flow due to the interstitial
water in the blank pocket 98 above the lateral 64. This phenomena was observed during
testing.
[0084] The only way to find the minimum pressure drop required to eliminate the two phase
pockets 98 above the lateral 64 is experimentally. The minimum pressure drop experimentally
measured from a successful test can be empirically extended to other solid diameters
by the velocity head concept. A velocity head is defined in Equation 7.
[0085] Equation 7: velocity head = h
v = V²/2g
c
wherein:
h
v = velocity head
V = media fluid velocity
g
c = gravitational constant.
R. H. Perry & C. H. Chilton,
Chemical Engineers' Handbook, 5th Ed., McGraw-Hill Book Co., pp. 5-22 and 5-49, 1973.
[0086] It has been found in similar applications that it takes at least 10 velocity heads
to achieve even distribution across a bed of solids with a single fluid phase. It
has also been found that greater than 10 velocity heads is required to overcome the
two phase pockets above the lateral conduits. The number of velocity heads has been
extended to different solid sizes and characteristics. The minimum operating parameter
for velocity heads, as applied to granular types of media, is conservatively fixed
at 26 as the result of testing.
[0087] The velocity head concept is utilized to fix the minimum required fluid flow rate
and collector configuration. The minimum velocity head concept consistently gives
a flat bottom container thereby precluding the need for a suction low point in the
container. Operation above the minimum flow rate insures sufficient vertical and horizontal
differential pressure to bring the fluid to the collector. Free draining of the liquid
in the container is not a significant factor as in prior art. The flat bottom container
is less expensive, allows for packaging greater than 5% more waste volume over prior
art containers and does not require excessive handling to carry out the dewatering
process. Prior art requires a low point in the container to effect a spot to collect
and remove free standing water. The low point can be achieved by making it a part
of the container or by tipping the container to make the low point. Both methods have
serious operating and economic disadvantages. The container low point that results
from sloped or conical bottoms are more expensive to construct and result in more
than a 5% loss in usable volume. Tipping the container requires additional handling
of a radioactive container that usually is placed inside of a shield. The tipping
technique results in added personnel radiation exposure and very difficult container
handling.
Powdered Media
[0088] The dewatering container internals for powdered media are based on liquid flow. The
calculations for liquid flow in powdered media are similar to those used in Equation
1 for gas flow through granular media. Equation 8 is the formula used for flow of
an incompressible fluid through a bed of solids.
[0089] Equation 8: p₁-p₂=(2G²/g
cρ)[f
mL(1-e)²/D
ps²e³]
wherein:
ρ = density
and the other parameters are as in Equation 1.
R. H. Perry & C. H. Chilton,
Chemical Engineers' Handbook, 5th Ed., McGraw-Hill Book Co., pp. 5-52 to 5-53 (1973). The factors representing
the properties of a gas have been dropped out. The temperature term has also been
dropped, but still plays an important role in correcting the viscosity term used in
establishing the Reynolds number and the corresponding friction factor, f
m. The same friction factor plot as shown in FIGURE 15 is used for liquids. The pressure
drop of water flowing through ion exchange resins is well founded, and Equation 8
correlates to that data with less than a 1 percent error.
[0090] The shape factors and void fraction for powdered media are considerably different
than for bead-type resins. Powdered media has more of a sliver shape. Therefore, the
shape factor will go down, simulating crushed glass or certain types of sand. The
void fraction will go up since the packing efficiency will not be as good as for spheres.
[0091] The use of Equation 8 to establish the elevation of the filter banks and the spacing
between filters represents a significant advance in water removal efficiency. The
maximum distance that water can move to the filter can be determined based on pressure
drop, with a perfect vacuum being the ideal upper limit. If the pressure drop is dissipated
at a distance less than the distance between the filters, then the possibility of
a water pocket exists. This concept combined with properly designed distributors provides
an improvement over the prior art.
[0092] The powdered media dewatering relies on air drying to remove the tail of the free
water that mostly occurs from thermal effects. Since the same dewatering system is
used on granular media, it also receives the benefit of the air drying. The evaporation
effects are calculated in the Thermodynamics discussion below.
Summary of Fluids Calculations
[0093] The foregoing fluids calculations can be integrated in a single software package.
The logical calculation sequence follows the same path as the fluid flow through the
actual system and as the calculations are ordered above.
[0094] The calculations for determining the operating range for the dewatering system can
be used to devise an operating region that is bounded by four curves: (1) the blower
operating curve (2) the maximum possible flow out of the distributor (3) the minimum
flow curve determined by the velocity head concept, and (4) the lower distributor
performance curve determined by the distribution criteria. Such an operating region
assumes that all other factors are held constant. Realistically, some of the factors
will change in relation to each other, as illustrated in FIGURE 17 below. However,
the most important tie is between the voidage and the shape factor; as one changes,
the other tends to compensate for it.
[0095] The unique result is a region defining the operating parameters of the container
and process system fluid flow as it directly relates to the waste characteristics.
This operating region, as predicted by the aforementioned calculations, is summarized
on FIGURE 16 for the current production system. This operating region is bounded by
the collector distribution criteria curves 102, 104, the blower operating curve 106,
and the minimum velocity head flow rate curve 108, all as derived from the calculations
above, that intersect at points A, B, C, and D on FIGURE 16. Average particle diameter
curves 110 on FIGURE 16 are derived from Equations 1 and 2. The only curve not derived
using the above-stated calculations is the blower performance curve 106. The blower
curve 106 can be selected from equipment supplier data to overlay the other curves
such that both powdered and bead resins are optimally processed by the same mechanical
system.
[0096] This same set of curves can be expressed in other formats. For example, the curves
could be normalized to flowrate versus pressure drop per foot of bed depth. The applications
would be the same. It is important to note from the following summary the many concepts
that have been assembled to determine the operating region (defined by points A-B-C-D
of representative FIGURE 16) necessary to properly meet the free standing water regulations
on commercially available waste media.
[0097] The fluid mechanics design for the drying system is summarized on FIGURE 16 as a
bounded region defined by operating pressure versus fluid flow. FIGURE 16 is a culmination
of the fluid related design equations presented above. While FIGURE 16 does not indicate
any aspect of the system thermodynamics, proper fluid design is prerequisite to thorough,
consistent and timely thermal conditioning of the particles.
[0098] Referring to FIGURE 16, the operating region of the system is defined by four curves
(A-B, B-C, C-D, and D-A). Each curve represents a specific application of different
fluid mechanics concepts. The derived operating region is beneficial to real applications
of the system and for quantitatively bounding the system's physical characteristics.
Each new particle drying application would be tested with the analytic methods used
for deriving the operating region. The resulting operating point would either fall
within the existing operating region or a new system and a resultant operating region
could be derived to encompass the new operating point(s).
Collector Distribution Boundary
[0099] Line A-B is derived from Equations 5 and 6 and represents the upper boundary of the
system's performance. Line A-B is related to the evenness of flow along the collector
laterals and indicates the points at which the distribution criteria of the longest
collector lateral is exceeded. Line A-B gives the highest permissible flow rate for
that collector's configuration. It is important to note that the collector maldistribution
criteria applies to the flow along the collector lateral. It does not apply to the
distance between the collector laterals or to the flow pattern of fluid as it enters
the lateral, both of which are related to the minimum required flow through the particles
as discussed below.
[0100] Equation 6 determines the degree of maldistribution across a collector lateral, and
the factors h
p and h
o1 are derived from Equations 3 and 5. The maximum acceptable maldistribution value
is based on a judgement of the economics derived from experience, collector size and
blower capacity test correlations. Less than 5% maldistribution was selected as satisfactory
for applications where the minimum velocity head (H
MV) was about 26. We found that the collector maldistribution (% maldistribution) is
directly related to the minimum velocity head (H
MV) as follows:

Thus, by using a plenum or screen as the distributor a relatively small blower can
be employed, as a relatively small H
MV would be required.
[0101] If the flow through the collector is too high, then the kinetic energy term of Equation
5, V
i²/2g
c, will predominate. The kinetic energy factor increases at a rate greater than the
other applicable terms in Equations 5 and 6. Therefore, in Equation 6, the pressure
loss across the lateral (h
p) will rise faster than the pressure loss (h
o1) across the first lateral orifice, meaning the orifice adjacent to the closed end
of the lateral. Starting at the closed end of the lateral, a decreasing amount of
fluid will enter the orifices as the flow travels to the central header. At flow rates
above line A-B, more fluid will enter the outer orifices of the lateral than the inner
orifices, and the maldistribution value will exceed the allowable 5% difference between
the maximum and minimum lateral orifice flow. Fixing the maldistribution criteria
and then defining the minimum number of velocity heads assures the proper fluid distribution
relationship between the collector and the bed of solids.
[0102] Line C-D is analogous to line A-B and is also derived from Equations 5 and 6. Line
C-D represents the lower boundary of the system's collector performance and indicates
the points at which the distribution criteria of the collector is exceeded. Line C-D
gives the lowest permissible flow rate for a particular collector's configuration.
[0103] If the flow through the collector is too low, then the lateral friction factor, f,
in Equation 5 will predominate over the kinetic energy term, V
i²/2g
c. The lateral friction factor does not decrease at the same rate as other applicable
terms in Equations 5 and 6. As the flow is reduced, the orifice pressure drop falls
at a greater rate than the pressure drop, due to fluid friction in the lateral. Starting
at the closed end of the lateral, an increasing amount of fluid will enter the orifices
as the flow travels to the central header. Below line C-D, more vluid is entering
the inner orifices than the outer orifices, and the 5% maldistribution criterial will
be exceeded.
[0104] Lines A-B and C-D are constant flow lines extended from the operating points on curve
112 corresponding to the 5% maldistribution criteria. Curves A-B and C-D are defined
by Equation 6. The pressure loss across the first orifice, h
o1, can be defined in terms of the pressure at the bottom of the bed of particles. First,
Equation 1 must be written to give the particle bed bottom operating pressure. The
fluid head at the bottom of the particle bed, in feet of fluid, and as plotted on
FIGURE 16 as curves 110 for various particle diameters, is as follows:

wherein:
ρ₂ = gas density at bottom of particle bed, and where p₁ in an actual operating system
is usually atmospheric pressure.
[0105] The conversion of pressure from pounds per square foot, p, to feet of fluid or head,
h, is accomplished by simply dividing p by the density of the fluid at that temperature
and pressure.
[0106] The selected orifice pressure drop, h
o1, (for a desired flow rate and particle size) is subtracted from the pressure at the
bottom of the bed of particles, h₂, to give the pressure inside the pipe at the first
orifice, h
p1. This is shown as Equation 2A and plotted as curve 112 on FIGURE 16.
Eq. 2A h
p1=h₂-h
o1
Of course, for a suction system the particle bed plus orifice pressure drop, and therefore
h
p, cannot exceed a full vacuum.
[0107] Now the distributor maldistribution criteria can be written in terms of Equation
1 by substituting Equation 2A into Equation 6 to give Equation 3A, and then Equation
1A into Equation 3A to give Equation 4A. The maldistribution equation becomes:

[0108] The lines containing segments A-B and C-D correspond to the points on curve 112 where
the maldistribution criteria is equal to 5%. The lines containing segments A-B and
C-D are run through those two points on curve 112 at constant flow rates. Note that
Equations 3A and 4A give two solutions, as shown by the parabolic shape of the distributor
performance plot (curve 112) and the resultant two points on the curve giving segments
A-B and C-D. The resultant two solutions are consistent with the concept of two roots
of a quadratic equation. The distance from points B to E and C to F are consistent
with maximum and minimum allowable orifice pressure drops in relation to the lateral's
friction loss.
[0109] Collector maldistribution due to low flow rate can occur when there is an excessive
pressure loss in the system. The excessive pressure loss can be attributed to (1)
the slurry bed particles are too small, (2) fluid line losses external to the collector
are too great, (3) excessive pressure drop in the water separator, and (4) the blower
is throttled, worn or malfunctioning. Lines C-D and A-B can be altered vertically
by increasing the lateral diameter, using smoother pipe, or changing the number and/or
diameter of the orifices (altering the pressure drop across the orifice). The described
powdered media application is an example of altering the collector lateral design
to place the operating point within an appropriate operating region.
[0110] Excessive kinetic energy and lateral friction losses due to excessive lateral flow
rates can originate from two sources: (1) the economic selection of the smallest practical
pipe diameter, and (2) the desire to have a maximum number of laterals in the container
to promote greater and quicker flow distribution through the slurry bed. There is
a trade-off between the smallest lateral's performance and the number of laterals
that can fit into the container.
Slurry Bed Flow Boundary
[0111] Curve A-D specifies a third boundary of the operating region. Simply being within
the other three boundaries insures good collector distribution but does not insure
good distribution through the slurry bed and collector. The even flow of the fluid
down the slurry bed and into the collector orifices is dependent on several factors.
Direct factors are the characteristics of the slurry bed itself and collector geometry.
Equation 1 summarizes the applicable physical factors of the slurry bed affecting
the flow through the slurry bed. Indirect factors are the way the fluid moves down
the slurry bed and preferentially enters the collector orifices, two phase flow resistance,
and container design effects (wall effects, bottom geometry, installation clearances,
etc).
[0112] Because of the many factors affecting the uniform flow through the slurry bed, the
fluid maldistribution through the slurry bed and into the collectory cannot be directly
quantified as it can for the collector. Instead, the velocity head concept (see Equation
7) is used to characterize the minimum flow required to give proper fluid distribution
through the slurry bed and into the collector. A velocity head is a unit measure of
the fluid's kinetic energy. Fixing a minimum number of velocity heads, or fluid kinetic
energy, across the slurry bed as an indicator of even flow has a basis in fundamental
equations of fluid motion.
[0113] The square of the fluid velocity is a fundamental part of any representation of fluid
motion. Equation 5A is Bernoulli's equation:
Eq.5A: V²/2g
c + p/v + z = constant
wherein: V = media fluid velocity
p = fluid pressure
v = specific weight
z = position change along the z axis.
O.W. Eshbach,
Handbook of Engineering Fundamentals, 2nd Ed., John Wiley & Sons, Inc., p. 6-35, 1966.
[0114] Equation 5A is the basic energy equation of fluid motion for a non-viscous effect,
incompressible fluid flowing in the direction of a streamline. The first term denotes
the kinetic energy, the second is the work performed by the fluid, and the third term
is the position change along the z axis or the potential energy due to gravitational
effects. A real fluid would include terms for the heat generated due to viscous drag
and compressibility effects. Heat, work, potential energy, and compressibility effects
are negligible in this case. The result is Equation 7 which is equivalent to the velocity
head relationship.
[0115] The attraction of using the velocity head concept stems from a velocity of 8 ft./sec.
is equal to a velocity head of 1 ft. of any fluid. The result is a specific velocity
head value can be applied across different fluids and bed depths to achieve the same
particle bed fluid distribution. It is convenient, but not necessary, that the velocity
head value for particle bed flow be nearly equivalent to the pipe flow values. This
convenience is achieved by simply using a factor in the head loss equation. Equation
1 is rearranged to get a velocity head term like that found in Equation 7.

h
p = particle bed head loss
The velocity head friction constant is then found from Equation 7A.
Eq. 7A H
MV = C
hh
p/h
v
wherein:
H
MV = constant number of velocity heads
C
h = velocity head friction constant
h
v = velocity head term from Equation 7.
For a velocity head value of 26 and using the operating data from the test case, the
velocity head friction constant (C
h) is 1.1 x 10⁻⁷, which is considered suitable for most applications.
[0116] The scale for the friction factor on Figure 15 was selected by its developers to
give a value of 1 for nearly spherical particles in the turbulent range. The result
is simplified correlations for turbulent range calculations. Additionally, the value
is a function of the empty vessel specific flow rate. This methodology differs from
the fluid dynamics of pipe flow. The difference is only important when a correlation
is made between flow through a bed of particles and pipe flow. Such a difference occurs
with the velocity head concept of minimum flow through a bed of particles.
[0117] The friction factor for pipe flow results from a bulk flow having a resistance at
the pipe wall. The friction factor for a bed of particles results from tortuous flow
through very small channels. The friction factor for pipe flow (about 0.000005) is
7 to 9 orders of magnitude lower than for particle bed flow (about 10 to 1000). The
gas velocity experienced in particle bed flow (about 0.1 ft./sec.) is more than 2
orders of magnitude less than usually found in pipe flows. Nevertheless, the velocity
head friction constant, C
h, correctly adjusts the velocity head value to the same order as used in pipe flow.
[0118] The square of the fluid velocity is a direct relation to the minimum energy required
for distributing the fluid across the slurry bed's cross section. The container's
minimum number of velocity heads can be viewed as a minimum total energy of the fluid
flowing through the slurry bed. If the fluid has sufficient energy, the resistance
imparted by the slurry bed will even out the flow along the slurry bed's cross section.
The minimum number of velocity heads required for even flow is determined experimentally
and is unique to each slurry bed and collector configuration. However, since the number
of velocity heads is dependent on the factors presented in Equation 1, the minimum
number of velocity heads can be upper bounded for a range of slurry characteristics
and collector geometries.
[0119] Curve A-D is a portion of line 108. Line 108 is a plot of Equation 7 where the number
of velocity heads, H
MV, is equal to 26 for the test configuration. The fluid velocity is also a function
of Equation 1. The velocity of the fluid, as the units are converted from empty vessel
mass flow to SCFM, is

where f
m is a function of the fluid velocity,
Eq.9A f
m = f(G) per Equation 2.
[0120] Curve A-D is the flow to pressure relationship at which the value of Equation 7A,
or the number of velocity heads across the slurry bed, is equal to 26. Curve A-D is
experimentally determined via a minimum number of velocity heads for a specific system.
The minimum number of velocity heads was determined from the evenness of pressure
measurements over the vessel cross section at several vertical levels. Below curve
A-D, the fluid will excessively follow preferential flow paths. This phenomena is
commonly known as fluid channeling. Curve A-D can be moved on the plot (in a velocity
squared to pressure relationship) for other container configurations, different slurry
bed heights, slurry characteristics, or as improvements are made in the collector
and container efficiencies. The change in curve A-D for different applications is
demonstrated below in an example of a real calculation sequence.
Blower Flow Boundary
[0121] Line B-C is the portion of the blower operating curve that falls on one edge of the
operating region. Within certain mechanical constraints, the blower operating curve
is selected to encompass the desired operating range of average particle diameters.
Ideally, point B would coincide with point A. However, that condition would assume
operation occurs on the blower operating curve with constant particle and fluid characteristics.
Actual container operation occurs to the left of the operating curve because of system
pressure losses, aging of the blower, and variations in the particle and fluid characteristics.
The shape and location of line B-C can be altered for specific applications by selecting
a different blower by customizing the blower system to a very narrow set of media
and container characteristics.
Definition of Operating Region
[0122] To provide a definition of the operating region, the equations must coincide with
the flow and pressure of operation as indicated by the FIGURE 16 ordinates. In other
words, the equations must be arranged to give the values on the ordinates on FIGURE
16. Mathematical statements of the operating region follow:
For air flow:
The uniform flow of the relatively dry gas through the particle bed and into the collector
is defined by the following head (h₂) to flow (G) relationship:
(i) the gas head at the bottom of the particle bed, h₂, is as follows:

wherein
h₂ = gas head at the bottom of the particle bed,
ρ₂ = density of the gas at the bottom of the bed,
p₁ = pressure of the gas at the top of the bed,
z = gas compressibility factor,
R = the gas constant,
T = gas temperature,
g
c = the gravitational constant,
M = gas molecular weight,
f
m = fluid flow friction factor defined by the function = f(D
pG/µ) and determined by reference to FIGURE 15,
L = height of the particle bed,
e = particle interstitial void fraction,
s = particle solid shape factor, and
D
p = average particle equivalent diameter;
(ii) the minimum flow (G) is as follows:

wherein
C
h = the velocity head friction constant = 1.1 x 10⁻⁷,
ρ₁ = density of the gas at the top of the bed, and
H
MV = a stated minimum number of velocity heads ranging from less than ten to about fifty;
(iii) given (i) and (ii), the flow to head loss relationship must fall within the
two roots of the following equation:

wherein
% maldistribution = stated positive integer or fraction ranging from less than one
to about ten,
h
p1 = the fluid head inside the collector at the orifice where the conduit flow is highest,
as defined by
h
p1 = 1/ρ₃[h₂ρ₂-(w/CYA)²(1-β)⁴/2g
cρ₁]
wherein
ρ₃ = density of the gas inside the conduit,
w = the average orifice flow rate,
C = the orifice coefficient of discharge, and
Y = the expansion factor,
A = particle bed cross-sectional area, and
β = orifice to conduit diameter, and
h
p = is the head loss due to the flow in the conduit as defined by h
p = [(4FL
c/3D
H) - 1] (V
i²/2g
c)
wherein
F = conduit friction factor,
L
c = length of the conduit,
D
H = conduit diameter, and
V
i = the maximum velocity inside the conduit;
and the uniform flow being caused by a blower having a pressure to flow performance
rating at least equal to that determined in (i) and (ii) and at least equal to the
the lower of the rates determined in (iii).
[0123] For water flow:
The uniform flow of water through the particle bed and into the collector is defined
by the following head (h₂) to flow (G) relationship:
(i) the water head at the bottom of the particle bed, h₂, is as follows:
h₂ = 1/ρ[p₁-(2G²/g
cρ)(f
mL(1-e)²/D
ps²e³)]
wherein
h₂ = water head at bottom of particle bed,
ρ = density of the water,
p₁ = atmospheric pressure,
G = mass flow rate of the water,
g
c = the gravitational constant,
f
m = water flow friction factor defined by the function = f(D
pG/µ) and determined by reference to FIGURE 15,
L = height of the particle bed,
e = particle interstitial void fraction,
D
p = average particle equivalent diameter, and
s = particle solid shape factor; and
(ii) given (i), the flow rate to head loss relationship must fall within the two roots
of the following equation:

wherein
% maldistribution = an integer or fraction ranging from about 0.25 to about 20,
h
p1 = the water head inside the collector at the orifice where the conduit flow is highest,
as defined by
h
p1 = 1/ρ [h₂ρ-(w/CYA)²(1-β)⁴/2g
cρ ]
wherein
w = the average orifice water flow rate,
C = the orifice coefficient of discharge,
Y = the expansion factor,
A = the particle bed cross-sectional area,
β = the orifice to conduit diameter ratio, and
h
p = the head loss due to the water flow in the conduit, as defined by
h
p = [(4FL
c/3D
H)-1] (V
i²/2g
c)
wherein
F = conduit friction factor,
L
c = length of conduit,
D
H = conduit diameter, and
V
i = the maximum water velocity inside the conduit;
and the uniform water flow being caused by a blower having a pressure to flow performance
rating at least equal to that determined in (i) and at least equal to the lower of
the rates determined in (ii).
[0124] As noted above, all four operating region boundaries are dependent on fluid flow
and its resultant pressure drop; hence, the selected x-y coordinate units as illustrated
on FIGURE 16, the representative region graph. These coordinate units (volume flow
rate and pressure drop) are convenient for real applications since they are directly
measurable on an operating system.
[0125] The operating region indicated on FIGURE 16 represents a unique tie between the collector,
the blower, and the flow through the slurry bed in the container. Different system
designs would have an operating region following the same concepts outlined above.
However, the shape may change as the absolute values of the collector and velocity
head curves change or a different blower is selected. In other words, one or all of
the defined curves can diminish to a single operating line or point, or can be plotted
in different locations. It is not required that the operating region have the characteristic
shape shown on FIGURE 16, though it will in nearly all practical cases.
[0126] All of the curves on FIGURE 16 were verified by actual test data and found to be
accurate with less than 1% error. A representative test point 114 is shown on FIGURE
17 and the relevant test data is disclosed thereon and discussed below with reference
to Example 1. The unique capabilities of this method are supported by an actual power
plant application. Many plants currently solidify their mixtures of ion exchange resins
because they cannot be properly separated before dewatering by prior art systems.
The calculation methods of the present invention allow for determining if the characteristics
of the resin mixture will fall within the prescribed operating region. The appropriate
fluid collector design and number of collector levels can be designed to fit with
the existing mechanical equipment and still maintain certainty of meeting the regulatory
limits on free standing water. Hence, the existing liquid treatment medias mixtures
found in actual applications can benefit from the economics of volume reduction and
the simplicity of this invention.
[0127] While FIGURE 16 represents the operating region of a specific existing system, the
operating region can be altered to fit unique economic or operating requirements.
The same basic analytical methodology could be used to move, shrink, or expand the
operating region. A realistic example would involve an application where only small
containers, say 50 cubic feet instead of 200 cubic feet, are to be used and/or short
processing times are not required. A smaller mechanical processing system could be
utilized in proportion to the waste volume size and the time necessary to process
the waste. Then the operating region could represent a lower flow rate area for smaller
containers or it could be shifted down and to the left by using more collector levels
than otherwise required in the container. The ability to uniformly flow the fluids
through the container by the analytical methods and the specific mechanical equipment
design allow for such collector flexibility in meeting field conditions.
[0128] The fluids calculations can also accurately perform a parametric study on the waste
form, as shown for example by FIG. 17, to determine the effect of other waste variables
such as particle depth, fluid temperature, particle shape, and particle bed void volume.
This unique capability allows for custom designing the container internals. The custom
designed container internals in effect match the waste form to the mechanical processing
equipment. For example, the same basic design techniques are used on the layered powdered
material internals as in the bead materials but the result is a "four containers in
series" design (the tiered levels) for the powdered material because of the limiting
effect of pulling a vacuum through the finer media. If such a mixture were processed
in an unheated building in a cold climate, then the fluid temperature would be of
concern since the location in the operating region can be altered by up to 30% by
the change in the fluid viscosity with temperature.
[0129] The calculations presented herein give minimum parameters that must be incorporated
in the final physical equipment. Examples are the minimum flow rate and the distributor's
distribution criteria. The transition from the analytical minimums to the final physical
design involves many practical design decisions. Many of those decisions revolve around
the velocity head concept. It should be remembered the minimum number of velocity
heads value is a characteristic of a specific container geometry and collector configuration.
However, a new collector's configuration can be conservatively selected below that
indicated by a container with a known number of velocity heads. Examples of such design
considerations follow: (i) the lateral horizontal spacing can be closer than that
indicated by a successful container with a known number of velocity heads; (ii) the
orifice velocity must be greater than that indicated in the known container; (iii)
the orifice spacing along the lateral must be equal to or less than that in the known
container; and (iv) the screen around the laterals that keep particles in the container
must be offset from the orifice to preclude diminishing the orifice flow. If the screen
is not offset from the orifices, then the reduction in the orifice's open cross section
must be considered.
[0130] There are two alternate applications of the foregoing analytic techniques that aid
in determining custom internal configurations. The result of those alternate applications
are (1) determination of the number and placement of multiple vertical levels of collectors
and (2) the maximum distance between laterals (conduits). The system is based on the
suction of the fluid through the solids in the direction of gravity. Since it is a
suction system, the maximum pressure drop across the solids that will still effect
fluid flow, at the greatest distance from the lateral, is a near perfect vacuum.
[0131] Equations 1-6 and 8 can be used to determine the distance from the lateral (conduit)
at which a perfect vacuum occurs. That distance is determined above, below and horizontal
to the distributor by appropriately altering the effect of the gravitational constants
in the applicable equations. The vertical distance between the collector levels is
the sum of the distance down from an upper collector at which a perfect vacuum occurs
and the distance up from the next lowest collector at which a perfect vacuum occurs.
Similarly, the horizontal distance between laterals can be determined.
[0132] Certain lateral design considerations must be followed to insure the practical application
closely approximates the analytic determinations. An example occurs in the screening
of the laterals to preclude entry of the particles into the orifices. The lateral
screen is preferably off-set from the orifice to preclude diminishing the orifices'
area available for fluid flow. However, if the screen were placed against the orifice,
allowance for the closed area of the screen could be made by increasing the orifice
diameter.
[0133] The vertical spacing of multi-collector containers and the horizontal spacing of
the laterals can be determined using Equations 1 and 8. As written, Equations 1 and
8 are for a fluid flowing down through a bed of solids. The gravitational constant
can be altered to account for upflow or horizontal flow of the fluid. The distance
that a collector can pull the fluid upwards is determined by letting the gravitational
constant go to zero and then increasing the bed depth until the total pressure drop
(orifice, piping, system and across the particles) nearly reaches a full vacuum. The
vertical distance between any two horizontally oriented collectors would be the sum
of the up flow distance and the similarly determined down flow distance. The distance
between laterals is twice that similarly determined for vertical distances except
the gravitational constant is multiplied by the cosine of 90 degrees.
[0134] The design calculations for water and air flow provide a unique opportunity in nuclear
water treatment applications. A disposable container can be loaded with new granular
water treatment media (ion exchange resins, zeolites, activated carbon, etc.) and
radioactive water treated through the media within that disposable container. When
the treatment media is exhausted, the dewatering sequence is initiated. The container
internals can be designed for the air flow required for dewatering and then the acceptable
water flow range through those same collectors can be determined for the water treatment
sequence. The results over the current art are more efficient water processing, negligible
transfer of radioactive media, reduced personnel exposure, less process times (water
treatment and dewatering), and lower costs.
THERMODYNAMICS
Approach
[0136] The dewatering system of the present invention uses convective evaporation with air
for two purposes: (1) to enhance the removal of any residual free standing water,
and (2) to slightly dry the resin such that it provides a desiccant-like effect with
respect to condensate generation. The difference between the granular and powdered
media, as far as evaporative effect, is the difference in the composite structure
of the entire media bed towards the end of free water removal. The granular media
maintains a rigid structure that is very conducive to fundamental fluid dynamics and
subsequent drying. The powdered media exhibits a somewhat random creviced structure
when the unadsorbed water is nearly all drawn out of the media. Evaporative water
removal compensates for the randomness of the crevices by drying the exposed faces
of the cracked powdered media. The dried media absorbs excess moisture from the interior
of the bed as described below.
Mechanical Equipment Thermodynamics
[0137] Psychrometric operating curves can be developed that represent the heat, dewpoint,
and water vapor operating curves of the dewatering system after free water removal
but prior to the complete drying of the resin. The curves can be drawn on the applicable
portion of a standard psychrometric chart wherein water content, dry bulb temperature,
and constant enthalpy form the axes. R. H. Perry & C. H. Chilton,
Chemical Engineers' Handbook, 5th Ed., McGraw-Hill Book Co., pp. 12-4 and 12-5, 1973.
[0138] FIGURE 18 represents the heat, water, and water vapor operating curves of the dewatering
system after free water removal but prior to the complete drying of the resin. The
curves are drawn on the applicable portion of a standard psychrometric chart. Points
1, 2, and 3 on FIGURE 18 represent the input to the blower (or exit from the water
separator), heat rise seen at the exit of the blower, and the saturated condition
at the exit of the container, respectively. Moving along the dew point line from point
3 back to point 1 represents the condensation of water in the water separator. Extension
of the horizontal line to point 4 on FIG. 18 is due to adding heat via an outside
source or heater. The fixed temperature in the water separator represents a constant
saturated air reference point from which to work from. The prototype testing used
a conservative 60°F air exiting the water separator. The production system utilizes
a water chiller that can maintain a lower air temperature.
[0139] The amount of water removed from the system is determined from the right-hand side
of the psychrometric chart. The distributor limiting flow rate of 260 standard cubic
feet per minute is used, and the minimum and maximum water removals as determined
by the two charts on FIG. 18 are 26 and 50 gallons, respectively, over an 8-hour cycle.
This illustrates that a further advantage can be attained by adding an auxiliary heater
to superdehumidify the airstream 18 after it leaves the blower. It is interesting
to note that testing and previous experience indicates drained residual free water,
without evaporative drying assistance, has been in the range of 10 to 25 gallons.
However, that testing did not allow for the entire waste contents to reach the burial
condition temperature of approximately 55°F. At the burial condition up to 60 gallons
of water could be produced from condensation alone in prior art systems in which the
media is not dried.
[0140] Since the dewatering system preferably operates in a recycle mode, it is essentially
closed with respect to the atmosphere. Therefore, on FIGURE 18, the water content
when going from point 1 to points 2 and 4 is constant and the change is due only to
heat input as the air passes through the blower (and heater, if applicable). The line
from point 2 to 4 represents the heat added by the heater. When the air is passing
through the container there is no appreciable change in the heat content of the air
and water vapor mixture. Therefore, the line from point 2 or 4 follows the constant
enthalpy line up to the saturated air line at point 3, gaining moisture along the
way. From point 3 to 1, the water separator drops the air temperature and much of
the water content as it moves down the saturated air line.
[0141] The detailed design has taken into account heat losses out of the container walls
and in the filter and piping. The effect of heat losses on the curves shown in FIGURE
18 is that they slightly deviate from the constant value lines. When the resins are
dried below their saturation point, point 3 will begin to move down line 2-3 and show
a lower relative humidity at the container exit. The other operating lines will remain
the same.
[0142] The accuracy of using psychrometric charts to characterize the operating parameters
of the dewatering system were verified with temperature, humidity, and water removal
measurements. Even when pressure and heat loss deviations are ignored, the results
are within good design practices.
Ion Exchange Resins
[0143] Ion exchange resins represent the worst thermodynamic case because they contain 35
to 65 percent bound water after all of the interstitial water has been removed. The
bound water remains available, to varying degrees, for vaporization within the resin
bed and subsequent condensation around the container wall when the container is exposed
to a lower temperature at burial conditions relative to the temperature of the waste
during the dewater processing. Bead-type resins represent a worst case for condensation
because of their much greater ability to move air and water vapor within the resin
bed. Prior art dewatering systems have not addressed the operating and burial condensation
problem.
[0144] The approach of the present invention to the condensation problem follows these steps:
(1) determine the credible worst volume of water that may be present due to condensation
in the buried condition; (2) find the degree of resin dryness that must be achieved
to allow for reabsorption of any condensation that may be generated in the burial
condition; and (3) determine a finite end point for the dewatering process. Two parameters
unique to ion exchange resins are critical to solving the aforementioned three steps.
First, the heat capacity of the polystyrene, water, and chemicals that make up the
resin must be determined. Second, a resin drying relationship must be found.
[0145] The heat capacity values for various chemical forms of ion exchange resins are not
well tabulated. However, a relation to the material properties was found that closely
matches experimental results. Equation 9 is the method used to determine the heat
capacity values for various resin forms.
[0146] Equation 9: C
PR= X
H2OC
PH2O + X
ChemC
PChem + X
PolyC
PPoly
wherein:
C
P = Heat capacity of the resin (R), water (H₂O), pure liquid chemical (Chem), and polystyrene
(Poly), respectively, Btu/lb.-°F.
X = Molar fraction of the water, pure liquid chemical, and polystyrene, respectively.
J. M. Smith & H. C. Van Ness,
Introduction to Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics, 2nd Ed., McGraw-Hill Book Company, pp. 128-130, 1959. The reference indicates that
Equation 9 should only be used when no other methods are available. Heat capacity
values for pure components were derived from standard chemical thermodynamic tables.
The results of Equation 9 were checked against values derived from actual testing
temperature data and an equation analogous to Equation 10, below. The deviation between
calculated and test values has been less than 0.1 Btu/lb.-°F.
[0147] Since the heat capacity is dependent on the type of resin and its chemical form,
Equation 9 allows for finding the worst case, largest heat capacity value that may
be encountered in field conditions. Actual calculations on a range of chemical compositions
show the water content to be the overriding factor since its heat capacity is several
times greater than the other components and has a significant molar fraction. Therefore,
the range of possible heat capacity values is not great in absolute value, but has
a significant impact on large volumes of resin. Heat capacity data for the pure chemical
solutions in the resin were derived from sulfate salts for the cation and sodium salts
for the anion.
[0148] The highest temperature the waste media is expected to be is 110°F. The burial condition
is 55°F. A conservative assumption is that all of the heat content of the waste media
spanning 55° to 110°F is capable of vaporizing water adsorbed in the resin and then
condensing at the container wall. The total heat available to produce condensate is
given by Equation 10.
[0149] Equation 10: Q
R = V
R ρ
RC
PR(T
R - T
∞)
wherein:
Q
R = total heat content of the resin, Btu
V
R = volume of the resin, ft³
ρ
R = density of the resin, lbs./ft³
C
PR = heat capacity of the resin, Btu/lb-°F
T
R = temperature of the waste, °F
T
∞ = ambient temperature of the container, °F.
J. M. Smith & H. C. Van Ness,
Introduction to Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics, 2nd Ed., McGraw-Hill Book Company, pp. 56-57, 1959.
[0150] For design purposes, the maximum heat capacity, volume, and density values can be
used to size equipment. Equations 9 and 10 were used to help distinguish if there
were significant differences between various types of resins. At this point there
are not large differences between resins but there are when it comes to adding sensible
heat to the resin to achieve the desired dryness endpoint, as explained below.
[0151] Once the total heat content is derived from Equation 10, the maximum water volume
that can be derived from condensation is determined from the psychrometric chart.
Assuming the temperatures, 55° to 110°F, the enthalpy change and the change in water
content can be read from the chart. The total heat content divided by the enthalpy
change per pound of air gives the total pounds of air required to cool the resin.
The total pounds of air times the water content of the air gives the maximum total
poundage of water expected to condense from the resin. This calculation can be eliminated
by maintaining the media slurry at the expected storage temperature of, e.g., 55°F
during the course of the dewatering treatment, as described below, as T
R would then approach T
∞.
[0152] In this system, condensation never forms in the burial condition because the dried
resin readsorbs the water before it can form. At the worst case, the dewatered and
dried resin in these containers has a saturated water/water vapor equilibrium equivalent
to 55°F, or the burial condition. When the temperature drops from the maximum waste
temperature of 110°F to 55°F, the dried resin acts as a very efficient desiccant to
adsorb the additional moisture in the air.
[0153] Once the maximum volume of water for resin reabsorption is determined, the next step
requires data outlining the water uptake performance of various resins. The water
uptake performance of ion exchange resin is complicated by three main characteristics
of the resin: (1) the capacity of the resin, (2) the degree of crosslinking, and (3)
the nature of the chemical solution in the resin. Items 1 and 2 can be conservatively
quantified at the maximum published capacity for any strong cation or anion (2.1 and
1.4, eq./l., respectively) and at a maximum of 10% (divinylbenzene, DVB) crosslinking
for each resin type, respectively. FIGURE 19 illustrates the effect of resin crosslinking
on the ability of the resin to hold water. F. Helferich,
Ion Exchange, McGraw-Hill, p. 107, 1962. Oxidation and repeated regeneration can affect the crosslinking.
[0154] The nature of the resin's aqueous phase is analogous to vapor pressure equilibriums
of aqueous solution thermodynamics. As the concentration of the solution increases,
the liquid vapor pressure decreases. At some point, there is an equilibrium with the
surrounding gas. Equilibrium water/vapor sorption curves can therefore be prepared
for the worst expected case cation and anion resins. F. Helfferich,
Ion Exchange, McGraw-Hill, pp. 100-109, 1962, expressly incorporated herein by reference. FIGURE
20 presents the equilibrium curves for the expected case cation and anion resins.
Note the dependence on the chemical form of the resin. If the resin is severely fouled,
or the ion in the slurry water is a large molecule like that found in decontamination
solutions, the curve tends to be nearly flat and lower on the vertical scale. Such
a curve would be the worst expected case since it indicates the relative humidity
endpoint must be much lower.
[0155] The weight of the maximum expected water to be generated, as explained above, can
be divided by the weight of the resin. The result can be applied to the curves of
FIGURE 20, and the corresponding relative humidity becomes the process endpoint. Then
as the temperature of the resin drops from the process ambient to the burial condition,
the humidity in the container increases and the resin will take up the added moisture
in the air. As the bulk resin temperature approaches the burial condition temperature,
the previously unsaturated resin approaches saturation. As the gas moisture content
increases and/or the relative humidity endpoint decreases, more gas sensible heat
is required to achieve the endpoint.
[0156] From the rationale described above, a worst case dewatering endpoint curve can be
developed, and the ordinates of the curve that is best suited to field operations
can be determined. For example, the waste beginning temperature is one ordinate but
the other may be humidity, processing time, dry and wet bulb temperature, or volume
of water removal from the container after the beginning of the drying cycle. Possibly
several waste specific endpoint curves may be required. The worst case would be one
each for cation and anion resins in the once used or regenerated state for each chemical
form. Such an approach would encompass the major field differences in moisture retention,
chemistry, capacity, and crosslinking. The ability to determine the effectiveness
of the dewatering system across the full spectrum of waste forms has very good promise
since the analytic projections have shown excellent correlation to the single point
derived from field tests.
Process Endpoint Derivation
[0157] The purpose of the endpoint method or methods used with this invention is to come
to a definite point where the process may be stopped and still assure that enough
adsorbed water has been removed to preclude the generation of free standing water
by the condensing cycle described above. Many endpoint methods can be developed out
of the aforementioned thermodynamic calculations. However, the methods apply to either
the properties of the air or the amount of adsorbed water removed from the waste.
Either method stems from the chemical or physical characteristics of the adsorbed
water and waste media, respectively, as described in the calculations section on thermodynamics.
With respect to the properties of the drying air, the endpoint methods can include,
but not be limited to, the humidity, wet bulb and dry bulb temperature, flow rate
to wet bulb temperature relations that relate to the adsorbed water removed, etc.
With respect to the adsorbed water removed, it could be simply measuring the amount
of water coming out of the water separator, a time versus water removal rate relationship,
container weight loss, etc.
[0158] Our field tests have proven many new concepts in radwaste dewatering technology.
The invention's analytical and testing results represent the first time the free standing
water question has been practically addressed and solved with respect to the container's
burial condition. It is also the first time full scale testing has been used to confirm
single data points within a predetermined operating region. The prior art relies on
measurement of the pumped or drained free standing water to determine the processing
endpoint. This type of endpoint can at best be treated statistically and not in direct
relation to any of the waste's properties or with respect to the generation of free
standing water in the burial condition. The invention uniquely utilizes a process
endpoint that (a) is directly related to the waste's free standing water generation
characteristics and (b) is oriented towards meeting the free standing water regulations
in the burial condition.
[0159] The significance of the waste media's pre-dewatering temperature was outlined with
reference to the foregoing thermodynamic calculations. Simply stated, the waste media's
heat content can provide the energy for evaporating water from the waste. The water
vapor subsequently condenses due to the lower temperature at or near the container
wall during burial conditions.
[0160] The waste media, when in the radwaste hold up tank, is typically in the 80 to 90
degree Farenheit range. Temperatures in the nineties are not uncommon and occasionally
occur up to 110°F. After the waste leaves its hold up tank, other factors usually
act to lower its bulk temperature. The sluice water is often at a temperature less
than the waste. Also, the locations used for dewatering are typically very similar
to a warehouse's transportation area, having cold concrete slabs, high ceilings and
large, uninsulated transportation doors.
[0161] Other than a waste temperature change due to the sluice water, the only other way
to affect the waste temperature is by ambient conditions. The waste media, as it sits
in the container, has very good self-insulating qualities. Therefore, the ambient
conditions can lower the waste temperature only when (a) they differ significantly
from the sluiced waste temperature and (b) the waste sluicing flowrate is low and/or
in long pipe runs. The ambient conditions obviously can be extreme. Radwaste areas
in U.S. nuclear plants in the upper midwest can fall below freezing while in the southeast
and southwest temperatures can be above 110°F. The burial temperature is a constant
temperature,a typically 55°F.
[0162] Two entirely different types of bead resins were selected for the qualification test
program and processing endpoint determination: a new, unused cation resin of known
chemical form that is very commonly used in the industry, and a used anion resin in
a fouled and regenerated state. See the following Examples 1 and 2. The new cation
resin provided a base data point since all of the chemical and physical characteristics
of the new resin were known. The used anion resin represented a worst thermodynamic
case. It was fouled with organics and had been subjected to repeated chemical regenerations.
The use of the two types of resins provided the following testing/verification advantages:
(1) the analytical methods could be verified on a media of known physical and chemical
characteristics, and (2) the analytical predictions and process equipment could be
proven on a worste case unknown waste form.
[0163] The method of this invention preferably utilizes the humidity of container exhaust
air and the waste's temperature prior to dewatering as the endpoint parameters. The
impact of the waste temperature has been described above in conjunction with Equation
10, and that of the exhaust air humidity in the discussion of vapor pressure equilibriums
following thereafter. The system operators will preferably use a direct reading humidity
meter 24 (see Fig. 1) to determine the endpoint of processing. Other methods for determining
the humidity could also be used. An example would be wet and dry bulb temperature
measurements.
[0164] The exhaust air humidity versus waste temperature curves for the processing endpoints
depend on the specific chemical nature of the resin's adsorbed water solution and
the chemical form of the resin itself. This fundamental discovery is a significant
advance in the art. FIGURE 20 illustrates this interdependence. These curves explain
the observed difference in time required to reach the same effective dewatered state
in resins that otherwise have the same physical structure. For example, in the testing
program it took up to 16 hours to dewater organically fouled anion resins but less
than eight hours to dewater hydrogen form cation resin. Similar curves can also be
developed for non-ion exchange waste medias as described above.
[0165] However, it is not practical to have an endpoint curve for every possible resin chemical
form. The expected resin chemical forms can be conservatively simplified into broad
categories as suggested by the water uptake curves of FIGURE 20 and the above-incorporated
Helfferich reference. From that reference, for monoelemental ions the curve shapes
are nearly identical within the range of humidity values of concern (90-100%). When
multi-elemental ions are considered, the curves are much flatter, and consequently
a much lower humidity must be achieved in order to remove the same amount of water.
The worst case multi-elemental curve can be selected. Therefore, the general classifications
of bead resins are the following:
[0166] Group 1. Non-regenerated, or once used, cation or anion resins loaded with or having
been treating waters with over 90% of the total water analysis as monoelemental or
simple oxide ions. Examples of such ions are the cations Na, Ca, H, Ba, Cu, Mg, Cs,
Fe, and the anions Cl, OH, Br, F, I, NO₃, SO₄, HCO₃.
[0167] Group 2. Cation resins that have either been repeatedly regenerated or have been
treating water with over 10% of the total water analysis as multi-elemental ions,
especially detergents and decontamination solutions.
[0168] Group 3. Anion resins that have either been repeatedly regenerated or have been
treating water with over 10% of the total water analysis as multi-elemental ions (except
simple oxides as listed under Group 1, above), especially detergents and decontamination
solutions.
[0169] FIGURE 21 presents process endpoint curves that have been derived for the groupings
described above, and specifically for those resins that are normally encountered in
field conditions: cation capacity less than 2.1 eq./l., anion capacity less than 1.4
eq./l., and all having less than 10% DVB crosslinking. On FIGURE 21, the dewatering
endpoint curve 118 is applicable to the above-stated Group 1 resins; curve 120 to
the Group 2 resins; and curve 122 to the Group 3 resins. It has been conservatively
assumed that regenerated resins will accumulate large molecules over their processing
time because of the tendency for incomplete regeneration effects and long term organic
fouling. The processing endpoints for Groups 1, 2, and 3 resins are stated as functions
of beginning waste temperature versus relative humidity of the exhaust air from the
container. Knowing the general resin type and the beginning waste temperature one
can simply read the relative humidity endpoint from the appropriate curve.
[0170] The application of the resin groupings to specific plant processes will be primarily
by experience. The nuclear utilities do not have the analytical equipment for determining
the full water or resin chemical analysis. Usually the chemical composition of the
resin must be determined by the normal operating parameters of the specific process
or from a knowledge of the chemicals put into the batch to be treated by the liquid
treatment media. When there is uncertainty, then the worst case endpoint curve can
be used with certainty. FIGURE 21 thus serves as an example of the means to group
the waste media's possible characteristics within the limited capabilities of the
power plant.
[0171] The foregoing discussion on direct humidity endpoints is directly applicable to any
fixed bed of rigid solids. In the case of powdered media, the particles are currently
not necessarily a fixed and rigid bed, though advances in the art may lead to that
condition. For powdered media the humidity readings are used to indicate the end of
the saturation point of the media. This is realistic since the interstitial water
is removed prior to the media's cracking and sloughing. After that point is reached,
the amount of water removed from the media can be measured as it comes out of the
water separator. From a knowledge of the proportion of ion exchange resin and the
pore diffusion capabilities of the waste structure and the waste particles themselves,
the water uptake capabilities of the powdered media can be determined as described
above and that water volume then set as the post-drying water separator effluent endpoint.
Drying Effects On Particles Shrinkage
[0172] The drying system depends on water being mechanically or chemically bound on the
particles. If the particle has sufficient elasticity, it will shrink when the water
is removed. Ion exchange resins are the only liquid treatment media with sufficient
elasticity and water volume to provide noticeable shrinkage. Other types of particles
(zeolites, activated or nonactivated carbon, diatamaceous earth, etc.) are relatively
rigid and do not noticeably shrink upon drying.
[0173] Ion exchange resins are long chain polymers crosslinked with other polymers. The
pores between those polymers contain the effective chemical groups and strongly desire
large scale hydration. FIGURE 20 indicates those particular types of cation and anion
exchange resins that contain up to 50% and 40% water, respectively. Uncommon new resins
or severly damaged resins could contain 75% water. The hydration effect is sufficient
to push open the pores between the polymers thereby expanding the particles. This
fluid pressure due to chemical density effects is known as osmotic pressure.
[0174] The osmotic pressure of ion exchange resins is often above 1300 psi. When ion exchange
resins are completely dried, the resins will shrink to about half their fully hydrated
size. If the fully dried resins are confined in a standard disposable container, the
container's burst pressure is typically less than the resin's osmotic pressure. If
sufficient water enters the container the resin volume will increase, and the container
may swell or burst. Such a condition may be a personnel, operational or environmental
hazard.
[0175] A burst container is obviously a personnel hazard. Additionally, a swelled container
may not fit into the transport cask. The buried resin may come in contact with trench
leach water, swell and then may crack the protective burial trench cap. The electrostatic
surface properties of very dry resins create a sticking and conveyance problem. Container
swelling is a very real concern when a vent is required on such containers. Very dry
resins would adsorb the moisture from the air and swell.
[0176] Resinous particles must not be dried too far past their burial equilibrium endpoint.
If the ion exchange resins are too dry, then they will excessively shrink. Should
burial trench liquids enter the shrunken, unsaturated resins, the resin will swell
with great osmotic pressure and potentially crack the burial trench cap. Additionally,
if the beginning resin temperature is very high, the conditioning of the resin to
the burial condition will significantly shrink the resin. Should the burial container
corrode away, the filling of the container void volume with collapsing soil may cause
the burial cap to crack. Given these two scenarios, the optimum solution is to just
condition the resin to the burial conditions and have the container completely filled.
[0177] The drying system only needs to remove sufficient water from the resin to equal the
saturated condition experienced by the resin at the burial temperature. Waste volume
reduction has a very significant, positive economic and radiation exposure impact.
Pursuant to this disclosure, advantages of volume reduction can be realized without
incurring unwanted excessive swelling of ion exchange resins. Since the resins are
conditioned to be nearly saturated in the burial condition, they cannot swell any
further in the burial condition should the container be breached and burial trench
leachate reach the resin. The drying system preferably incorporates a very accurate
humidity monitor capable of closely resolving the resin water removal to the burial
saturation condition. Such resolution precludes overdrying to an extent where volume
reduction could be a hazard.
[0178] Volume Relation to Moisture Content - The volume change of an ion exchanger with a change in its moisture content is
founded in chemical equilibrium reactions and the particle structure. The sources
of the volume change are the chemical characteristics found at the adsorption site
and the elasticity of the particle matrix. The particle volume will reach equilibrium
when the chemical solvation effects are offset by the elastic pressure of the particle.
[0179] The strong ion charge of a molecule will attract the polar molecules of the surrounding
solvent (in this case the solvent is water). Close to the ion is the water of hydration
and sufficiently far from the ion is free water. The distinction is not well defined
but it helps explain many phenomena. Ion exchange resins are the only liquid waste
treatment particles that exhibit this truly electrolytic solution behavior. The key
difference between the solution chemistry of ion exchange resins and an electrolytic
solution is that half the resin's ions are in a fixed location. Zeolites, carbon materials,
filter aids and the like do not exhibit this solution chemistry and elastic particle
behavior.
[0180] The literature treats the ion exchange resin expansion effects in two ways. From
the overall particle view, the difference in the chemical concentration at the resin
interior (near the resin's functional sites) versus the free water at the outside
of the resin results in an osmotic pressure effect. The osmotic pressure due to the
chemical concentration gradient is offset by the elasticity of the polymer matrix.
From the chemical hydration view, water molecules are packed in shells around the
resins functional site. The stronger the functional site, the more densely packed
the shells of water around the site. The water's desire to densely pack around the
functional site then pushes out the elastic polymer until there is an equilibrium
between the chemical push and the mechanical restraint.
[0181] There are relationships between an ion exchange resin's water content and its volume.
Fortunately the relationship is not as dependent on the various chemical and physical
characteristics of the resin as are the water uptake curves. The resin volume to water
content relationship is independent of the cross-linking of the resin and the hydrogen
and sodium form of the resins. The resin volume change with water content is mostly
dependent on the electrolytic strength of the functional groups on the resin.
[0182] As noted from the endpoint curves shown in FIG. 21, a typical Group 2 resin at 95°F
would have to be dryed until the effluent air is as low as 96% relative humidity.
This could result in a volume reduction of up to 7.3%. K. W. Pepper, D. Reichenberg,
D. K. Hale, "Properties of Ion-exchange Resins in Relation to Their Structure. Part
IV. Swelling and Shrinkage of Sulphonated Polystyrenes of Different Cross-linking,"
J.Amer.Chem.Soc., p. 3129, 1952. It is important to note this condition is more important
when the waste is at a high ambient temperature and has a reasonably steep water uptake
curve. This is a considerable economic advantage to the waste generator, as more waste
can be potentially added per container. However, not all of the 7.3% shrinkage can
be realized since the water from any additional slurry will reswell the part of the
container's shrunken resin it contacts. Nevertheless, a few percent change in the
resin volume would be significant to the user if it could be utilized. However, if
the resin is dryed significantly below the saturated burial condition, the excessive
volume reduction of the resin would lead to excessive swelling and resultant environmental
hazards in the burial trench.
[0183] Pursuant to this aspect of the invention, the processing endpoint is selected to
achieve saturated resin in the burial condition without excessive drying/shrinkage.
The humidity monitor is accurate to 0.5%, and the waste is preferably not dryed moe
than 4% below that indicated by the endpoint curves. Up to a maximum of 4% relative
humidity below the indicated endpoint curves would result in a potentially swellable
resin that is within container freeboard tolerances and waste form discrepancies.
Swelling beyond the container volume in the burial condition is precluded. Should
the resin be dryed more than 4% below the endpoint corresponding to the saturated
burial condition, the swelling volume could exceed 7% of the container volume and
that corresponding volume of compressible air in the container freeboard. Swelling
in the burial condition (due to the introduction of trench leach water or surface
water intrusion into a corroded container or a container vent) would then be excessive.
The volume reduction experienced after processing but prior to burial would present
a hazard if water (or water vapor more than 4% over the processing endpoint relative
humidity) were able to enter the container and the resin was not able to escape.
[0184] The resin volume to resin water content relation is well founded. See, for example,
K. W. Pepper, D. Reichenberg, D. K. Hale, "Properties of Ion-exchange Resins in Relation
to Their Structure. Part IV. Swelling and Shrinkage of Sulphonated Polystyrenes of
Different Cross-Linking," J.Amer.Chem.Soc., p. 3129, 1952, expressly incorporated
herein by reference. The relation is good across all forms of stored electrolyte resins.
The combination of the relative humidity to water uptake relation of the relatively
constant slope portion of the curves (above 80% relative humidity) shown in Figure
20 and the resin volume to resin water content relation gives Equation 10A where the
waste volume is in terms of the total container volume and the container's freeboard
volume.
[0185] Eq. 10A V
S = (100-%R.H.₁)(V
C-V
F)/(1.394 x 62.36)
wherein: V
S = additional volume available after shrinkage due to drying, or shrink volume
V
C = total container volume
V
F = container freeboard volume
%R.H.₁ = analytic relative humidity endpoint
(1.394 x 62.36) = a constant applicable for resins with strong electrolytic effects,
which encompasses the liquid treatment resins of interest.
[0186] Equation 10A can be used to determine the tolerance of the relative humidity endpoint
in relation to the minimum practical freeboard in any container. The freeboard volume
can be considered as a fraction of the container volume. The remaining shrink volume
in the container, after completely filling the container with at least saturated resin,
must be less than or equal to the freeboard volume. Therefore, the remaining shrink
volume can also be considered as a fraction of the container volume. Then Equation
10A takes the form of Equation 11A.
[0187] Eq. 11A F
fV
C = (%R.H.₁-%R.H.₂)(V
C-F
fV
C)/(1.394 x 62.36), or
F
f = (%R.H.₁-%R.H.₂)(1-F
f)/(1.394 x 62.36)
wherein:
F
f = freeboard volume fraction of container volume
%R.H.₂ = minimum relative humidity endpoint.
[0188] The term %R.H.₁ is determined from FIGURE 21, and F
f is the practical minimum freeboard for the particular container and operating procedures.
Then %R.H.₂ can be directly calculated. With a realistic freeboard of 3 inches out
of a 6-foot bed depth and a mixed cation and anion resin at 95°F, the relative humidity
endpoint tolerance, %R.H.₁-%R.H.₂, is 3.6%. The humidity monitor tolerance of 0.5%
is well within this permissible value. For example, if the relative humidity endpoint
tolerance, %R.H.₁-%R.H.₂, is fixed at the monitor tolerance, then the freeboard volume
fraction, F
f, for a 6-foot bed depth is 0.0057. This freeboard fraction represents less than 1/2
inch in the largest container. Therefore, it is well under what is practically achievable
in real operations. In other words, the humidity monitor (e.g., No. 1100DP, General
Eastern, Watertown, MA) has a greater sensitivity than necessary to meet the practical
freeboard tolerance.
[0189] The added container volume due to shrinkage of the resin during processing can be
utilized. Additional resin cannot be simply slurred into the vessel after processing,
as the slurry water would bring the conditioned resin back to saturation at the waste
temperature. However, a batch of resin, without interstitial water, can be added to
the top of the conditioned resin in the container. This batch of resin would usually
be less than 7% of the container waste volume, a significant economic benefit but
it has little consequential impact on the state of the processed resin.
[0190] Packing Efficiency - The users of the drying system report a greater waste volume per container than
obtained by competitive art. As demonstrated above, the volume reduction is partially
from drying effects. The differences in particle packing between random and ordered
structures would account for the remaining volume differences. A theoretical maximum
volume difference occurs when spheres are packed in a tetragonal versus cubic arrangement.
The percent void volume is 30.19 versus 47.64, respectively, for a nonexpanded bed.
Therefore, it is theoretically possible to achieve up to 17.5% volume reduction by
going from a cubic to tetragonal arrangement.
[0191] The real bed of particles does not consist of uniform size and shape spheres. The
ion exchange resins will consist of broken spheres and varying diameters. Zeolites
are oblong shaped and consist of dust size up to 800 microns. In practice, the arrangement
of a randomly dumped bed of spheres will typically fall somewhere between the cubic
and tetragonal arrangements with up to 10% of the particles broken. It is a common
practice in packed beds to tap the side of the column while filling. The literature
indicates that practice produces a 3 to 5 percent denser particle bed. M. Leva, "Fluidization,"
McGraw-Hill Book Co., p. 55, 1959. Other literature relates the sphericity of the
particles to the void fraction for varying degrees of packing density. D. Kunii, O.
Levenspiel, "Fluidization Engineering," John Wiley & Sons, p. 66, 1969. That relation
indicates the difference in void fraction, given a typical sphericity for ion exchange
resins (0.9), for loosely packed versus dense packed would result in a volume difference
up to 7.5%.
[0192] After the bulk free water is pumped out, there remains considerable free draining
water in the particle bed. That water effectively reduces the void fraction in the
bed. As noted in Equation 1, the void fraction term will drastically alter the pressure
drop across the particle bed. Therefore, when the blower is turned on, after the free
water has been pumped down, nearly a full vacuum is experienced across the particle
bed. Current art uses simple pumping that does not effect significant differential
pressure resulting in any packing.
[0193] It is reasonable that the force applied by the blower to the top of the particle
bed will cause the particles to move to a more ordered geometry and also force broken
or particle fines into some of the interstices. The result would be a volume reduction
greater than the reported 3 to 5 percent. Up to a 15 percent volume reduction has
been observed with this drying system, again, without overdrying the resin. The combination
of resin shrinkage due to controlled drying and shrinkage due to more dense packing
account for this significant volume reduction. The packing efficiency would be greater
for oblong or sliver shaped particles like powdered resins or zeolites because they
would pack alongside of each other. Even a few percent increase in waste volume per
disposable container has a significant economic impact.
Conclusion
[0194] Thermodynamically, the typical operating region for the dewatering system will easily
allow for drying most of the expected resins, and in fact for overdrying them unless
the dewatering endpoint is carefully selected pursuant to this disclosure. Tracing
the origins and specifications of the plant resins will assure operations within the
system's thermal capabilities. The method of the present invention has addressed "atmospheric"
conditions within the waste media bed because it has been found to definitely contribute
to free standing water. Prior art test programs have incorrectly concluded that atmospheric
factors (thermal/vapor/condensation effects) are not significant. The effect can be
easily masked by fluid dynamic problems and the very low thermal conductivity of the
resin and air.
[0195] Powdered media follows the same principles of fluid dynamics and thermodynamics as
granular media. However, the dewatering design purpose is different since powdered
media structurally differs from granular media but does not significantly differ within
the specific waste type like granular media. For example, ECODEX does not get as beat
up as condensate polisher bead resins and there are relatively not as many different
types of powdered treatment media. An initial water flow design is used prior to an
evaporative drying step. The consistency of the waste form is counterbalanced by the
randomness of the cracking of the resin after free water removal. The residual free
water which may be present after the initial water flow removal, or generated by condensation,
is successfully evaporated or reabsorbed by the same mechanism as in bead resins.
[0196] The design and testing was based on ion exchange resins since they are the primary
market. For example, the representative endpoint curves in FIG. 21 were derived for
ion exchange resins as stated above. However, the calculations and methodology described
herein also apply to other treatment media such as activated carbon and inorganic
zeolites. The fluid dynamic factors used for ion exchange resins, including flow,
voidage, solids, size, and shape are also applicable to other treatment media. The
thermal methodology and endpoint determination process described above are also directly
applicable to other forms of treatment media. The test techniques used on the ion
exchange resins can be duplicated on other media such as carbon, zeolites, and sludges.
[0197] It should also be emphasized that the aforementioned liquid treatment media can
be successfully dewatered by cooling the waste slurry to the expected burial temperature
prior to applying the above-stated fluid dynamic principles and methodology. For example,
the media could be contacted with chilled water or with refrigerant coils prior to
mechanical dewatering as described above. In this way, the wastes can be preconditioned
as that the condensing cycle--as defined and quantified for the first time herein--will
be inhibited down to the burial temperature.
[0198] In summary, the method and apparatus of this invention are based upon a multiplicity
of innovations that significantly advance the art. These innovations include the following:
1. The application of fluid flow calculations through a bed of solids. The physical
characteristics of the solids are taken into account.
2. The use of item 1 to determine the number and arrangement of collectors in the
container.
3. The use of item 1 to define the inlet conditions of the collectors.
4. The determination of the minimum fluid flow through a bed of solids to effect full
removal of interstitial water.
5. The design of the collectors to effect uniform flow through the cross section of
the particle bed. The precise size and pressure drop of the orifices and the flow
in the conduits are balanced together.
6. The use of a flow interrupter at the container wall to preclude preferential channeling
of the drying airstream down the container walls.
7. The waste media is dried below its water saturation point such that it will readsorb
any generated free water.
8. Item 7 is precisely achieved to correspond to the waste media's long term burial
conditions.
9. The processing endpoint for items 7 and 8 can be determined from direct readings
of the container exhaust air humidity. Alternatively, the volume of water removed
from the media after the drying cycle begins can be used to precisely define the processing
endpoint.
10. The processing system is a closed loop. The water separator simultaneously keeps
the air below temperature limits, condenses water from the air, and removes the entrained
water from the airstream.
11. The blower circulates and heats (dehumidifies) the air. The dehumidified air dries
the waste particles. While airflow from the container top region through the container
bottom region has been described herein, the drying airstream can alternatively be
passed through the manifold into the slurry, and the humidified air that has passed
through the slurry can be exhausted from the container top region.
12. The waste chemical form to dewatering endpoint relationship is defined.
[0199] Various adaptations can be made without departing from the scope of this disclosure
to streamline the calculation sequence and concurrently increase the efficiency of
the system. Such an improvement in the system efficiency would necessarily change
the position and/or shape of the operating region. Representative of such adaptations
are the following:
1. Add an upper distributor such as manifold 40 to the container. Plug flow would
be initiated by the upper distributor rather than sufficient pressure drop at the
particle upper surface.
2. Determine the fluid pattern around a distributor orifice, and then directly calculate
the lateral spacing, orifice spacing, and the orifice pressure drop.
3. Precisely calculate the orifice coefficient of discharge from the orifice Reynolds
number by curve fitting the relationship.
4. Directly calculate the minimum required airflow from the velocity head relationship.
5. Eliminate the inefficiency due to air flowing laterally to the collector laterals
by using a full cross-sectional distributor such as perforated plates or screens.
6. Directly calculate the lateral diameter that corresponds to the maldistribution
criteria and then directly calculate the lateral to orifice diameter ratio.
7. Generate water uptake versus relative humidity curves for all liquid treatment
media, thereby obviating the less convenient water removal measurements.
[0200] The result of such adaptations would be a direct calculation of a specific collector
configuration and a substantial increase in the effectiveness of the drying air. The
disclosed system size and cost can thereby be reduced concurrently with less processing
time.
[0201] The following examples are presented to illustrate the dewatering method and apparatus
of the present invention and to assist one of ordinary skill in making and using the
same. The following examples are not intended in any way to otherwise limit the scope
of this disclosure or the protection granted by Letters Patent hereon.
EXAMPLES
[0202] Numerous small scale tests were conducted in order to determine the initial full
scale design and operating parameters. Such tests were made to determine maximum conduit
spacing, particle size distribution, drying effects, and column tests. Many full scale
tests were conducted using prototype equipment in order to establish the design and
operating parameters that have been described above.
[0203] There are several procedural steps prior to the processing of waste or testing materials.
The first step is to conduct a preliminary waste characterization. Most often this
is conducted prior to the equipment arriving at a power plant, and it consists of
a questionnaire. The questionnaire insures that the waste to be processed is within
the operating bounds of the container piping and the processing equipment. If it is
not within those bounds, then the system is modified as described in the Calculations
section to accommodate the abnormal waste conditions. Once the equipment is at a power
plant, it is thoroughly inspected for damage, especially the container's internal
dewatering apparatus. Shortly after the equipment has been set up, it is functionally
tested without waste for the purpose of discovering any operating problems. The last
preprocessing step is to confirm the nature of the waste, the expected radioactive
fields, coordinate the waste transfer methods, and confirm all mechanical and personnel
safety features and valve settings.
EXAMPLE 1
[0204] Unregenerated cation ion exchange resins with monoelemental chemistry were processed.
The resin was known to be of relatively undamaged and, therefore, nearly uniform spheres
of 0.0256 inches average size, in the sodium form, with 8% crosslinking and 45% water
content.
[0205] A 200 cubic foot capacity container with a six-foot particle bed depth was used.
An air space of approximately six inches was left above the top of the slurry bed.
Structural steel skids containing the water separator, blower with filter, and control
valves were situated near the waste container. Four-inch diameter hoses were used
to interconnect the container, water separator, and blower. One hose was connected
from the container vapor outlet port to carry the container water and exhaust air
to the inlet on the water separator. Another hose was connected from the water separator
outlet to carry the dried air to the inlet of the blower. A third hose was run from
the blower outlet filters to the container air inlet port.
[0206] The water separator was a two-foot diameter by five-foot high stainless steel vessel
with a flanged top. The water separator contained a heat exchanger evaporating a compressed
refrigerant for cooling the air. As shown in FIGURE 1, the coil 98 was located under
the water level at the separator bottom. The exhaust air from the waste container
entered underneath the chilled water level. The cooled air rose to the top of the
separator after passing through a demister pad 100. The demister pad 100 is stainless
steel wool that drops the entrained water out of the air by impingement. A two-inch
hose drained surplus water from the water separator, under suction from a three-inch
diaphragm dewater pump, to a nearby floor drain.
[0207] A stand alone, five ton refrigeration unit on the order of 30,000 B.T.U. was located
next to the water separator. Inlet and outlet refrigerant lines recirculated the refrigerant
from the refrigeration unit through the water separator.
[0208] The blower was a 30 horsepower rotary vane blower (average 250 SCFM).
[0209] The hose connections at the waste container were on a fillhead that rested on the
container opening. The fillhead was fabricated from stainless steel plate and sheetmetal
and contained all of the connections between the exterior and the interior of the
container. The fillhead also contained waste shut off valves, a TV camera, radiation
sensors, and container waste level instrumentation connections, all conventional.
[0210] The flat-bottomed container used to dewater these bead resins had a single level
vapor collector manifold at the container bottom, as shown in FIGURES 6 and 7. The
header was a three-inch plastic pipe, and the lateral conduits were three-quarter
inch plastic pipe that had been through-drilled to provide one-quarter inch orifices
at approximately four-inch intervals along both sides of each lateral conduit. The
orifices were screened with a coarse screen (Naltex Flex Guard III) surrounding a
100-mesh screen (McMaster-Carr). The lengths of the conduits on each side of the header,
listed moving away from the open end of the header were: 17.75, 23.75, 27.75, 30.00,
31.50, 32.00, 31.50, 30.00, 27.75, 23.75, and 16.00 inches, with the conduits spaced
5.62 inches apart. This container also had an annular ring 72, in this case made of
one and one-half inch pipe, affixed approximately midway down the inner sidewall.
[0211] Power, air, water and instrumentation connections were made prior to receiving waste
into the container. These connections included water high level switch in the water
separator, temperature sensor at the blower, camera cables, waste level sensor lines,
and blower and refrigeration unit power cables, and dewater pump air line.
[0212] The cables with control or monitoring functions led to a free standing control panel.
It is advantageous to have the control panel free standing such that it can be located
outside of high radiation zones thereby reducing the operator's exposure. The panel
contains ON/OFF switches with or without an AUTO function for the blower and refrigeration
units. The panel also includes blower exit and container inlet temperature indicators
with high limit switches, emergency shut off switch, radiation monitor, status lights,
and the television monitor. After all of the preliminary check offs, the system is
ready to receive the waste.
[0213] Once the operator received the go-ahead to prepare to receive the ion exchange resins
the fillhead TV, radiation monitor, level switch circuitry, and the dewater pump were
turned on and their performance double checked. Plant personnel were notified that
waste transfer is going to begin. The operator remotely opened the waste influent
port in the fillhead. The waste entering the container was observed on the TV monitor.
The waste was a slurry of water and ion exchange resin of the above-stated composition.
This slurry was at 80°F as it entered the container. The dewater pump removed the
slurry water through the bottom vapor collector manifold at a rate faster than it
entered. The pile of resin easily flattened out across the container bottom. As the
resin level rose toward the top of the container, a high level switch indicated a
warning at the panel. The operator could also notice the level via the TV monitor.
At this point a waste inlet valve in the waste influent port was open and shut, in
coordination with the plant personnel, to allow the last increments of waste into
the container bottom region. The operator had the option of turning down the dewater
pump to allow water to rise to the top of the resin in the container to aid in letting
the resin bed flatten out under the container top region. When the container was as
full as possible, leaving only an airspace of approximately six inches in the container
top region, the waste influent port was secured shut after draining the line.
[0214] The dewater pump continued to operate after waste transfer was completed. The dewater
pump then removed the bulk of the interstitial water in less than 25 minutes. Thereafter
the water eminating out of the dewater pump hose tapered off to a small trickle. The
refrigeration unit was turned on and the blower shortly thereafter. As soon as the
blower was turned on the dewater pump discharge hose was flooded with water. (The
sudden draw on the residual interstitial water is occasionally so sudden that the
high level switch in the water separator kicks off the blower.) In five to ten minutes
the dewater pump discharge hose effluent tapered off to a trickle. At this point less
than 35 minutes had elapsed, and the waste was already at the equivalent dewatered
point of several days processing with prior art systems.
[0215] After about 45 minutes elapsed time the differential pressure across the resin bed
had tapered off to a steady state value (within a few hundredths of a PSI predicted
by the analytical methods summarized above with reference to the curves on FIG. 16
and the test point 114 on FIG. 17) corresponding to all air flow through the resin.
This point corresponds to the prior art's ideal capabilities. Actual drying (removal
of adsorbed water) of the resin had begun. The trickle of water leaving the dewater
pump discharge hose thereafter was condensed water originating from the resin. Within
one hour from the beginning it was noticed on the TV monitor that the ion exchange
beads on the top of the resin bed were significantly smaller, lighter, and tending
to swirl around the inside top of the container. From the testing program it is known
that the light resin at the top is a result of contact with less than 10% relative
humidity air. The resin only an inch below the light resin was still nearly saturated
with water at this beginning of the drying cycle.
[0216] The operating conditions were maintained nearly constant from the one hour point
to the five to six hour point. The trickle of water out of the dewater pump discharge
hose and the air's differential pressure across the resin were observed to be nearly
constant. Wet and dry bulb measurements or direct humidity readings showed 100% relative
humidity in the exhaust air from the container. Near the six hour mark the relative
humidity readings started to gradually drop below 100%. The appropriate process endpoint
curve 118 on FIGURE 21 indicated, as explained above, that the humidity should read
below 99% for such unregenerated cation resins containing more than 90% monoelemental
ions and at 80°F. This endpoint was reached during the seventh hour and the system
was shut down at the end of the eighth hour.
[0217] An overhead crane removed the fill head from the container. A permanent lid was immediately
installed on the container opening to prevent the possibility of air at greater than
the endpoint relative humidity from resaturating the resin. Once the permanent lid
was affixed, the container was ready for shipment to an approved landfill for permanent
storage.
[0218] As a test, the dewatered resin in this Example was allowed to cool until its core
temperature was less than the normal burial temperature of 55°F. To effect a core
temperature of less than 55°F, the outside of the container was necessarily less than
55°F. No free standing water generated from the container until a core temperature
of less than 45°F was attained. The fact that the threshold temperature was 10°F less
than predicted is due to the conservative nature of the Calculations and equalization
with the super dry resin at the top of the resin bed.
EXAMPLE 2
[0219] Anion ion exchange resins were dewatered. These resins had been regenerated, with
slight degree of resin breakage, and had an average diameter of 0.02463 inches, about
55% adsorbed water, plus a high visible degree of large organic molecule fouling its
adsorbed water. This resin represents the worst type of resin to be encountered.
[0220] The waste prescreening, equipment set up, equipment check out, functional testing,
preoperational coordination with power plant personnel, and start up were as described
in Example 1. This anion resin was processed identically as the cation resin in Example
1. As with the cation resin, the pressure drop through the resin was predicted by
the analytically derived performance curves to within a few hundredths of a PSI. The
resin was dewatered at 80°F. The relative humidity endpoint predicted by the appropriate
processing endpoint curve 122 on FIGURE 21 was about 92%. It took about 15 hours of
drying to reach the endpoint for this anion resin. After the humidity endpoint had
been achieved, the generation of free standing water was similar in nature to the
cation resin cited above. Here again, the regulatory limits set by 10 C.F.R. Part
61 were met.
EXAMPLE 3
[0221] Powdered media was dewatered. This media was a mixture of combined cation and anion
powdered ion exchange resins with a cellulose-based filter aid. The effective size
of the media was 0.002 inches. All powdered media is unregenerated, typically containing
monoelemental ions in the adsorbed water, and of consistent, uniform size. The narrow
and consistent physical characteristics of powdered media simplify the application,
but the nonuniform structural nature of the media bed in the container complicate
the application with respect to its cracking after interstitial water is removed.
[0222] The waste prescreening, equipment check out, functional testing, preoperational coordination
with power plant personnel, and start up were the same as described in Examples 1
and 2. The only difference in the equipment set-up was that a tiered series of vapor
collector manifolds as shown in FIGURE 9 was provided in the container bottom region.
The four vapor collector manifolds were positioned 6.0, 23.25, 40.5, and 57.75 inches,
listed lowermost to uppermost, above the container floor. An annular ring was not
provided. The conduits and headers were through-drilled at two-inch intervals to produce
alternating side-to-side and top-to-bottom orifices. The orifices were screened with
one micron filters (Hytrex). Four one and one-half inch hoses interconnected the vapor
collector manifolds and the water separator.
[0223] As the waste media was sluiced into the container the dewater pump removed the excess
water through the uppermost vapor collector manifold. This method allowed for maximum
compaction of the waste into the bottom of the container. After the media bed reached
the top collector, additional waste was introduced in an intermittent fashion until
the container was apparently completely filled. The waste influent port was then secured
shut.
[0224] Valves to the vapor collector manifolds were opened sequentially, from the uppermost
to the lowermost, as the vacuum at each manifold reached approximately 25 inches of
mercury. This point was selected as a reasonable maximum vacuum capability of the
dewater pump. The valves to the manifolds were then closed sequentially from uppermost
to lowermost as the vacuum at each manifold fell to approximately five inches of mercury,
at which point the vacuum drop off was observed to plateau. During this process most
of the interstitial water was removed. Observation of the TV monitor showed that the
surface of the particle bed had begun to crack. At this point approximately 40 minutes
had elapsed since the dewatering process was initiated.
[0225] Then the blower was turned on. A momentary rush of water entered the water separator
and thence exited from the dewater pump discharge hose. Within 30 minutes, the vacuum
level at the water separator stabilized at approximately 11 inches of mercury. Over
the course of the eight-hour test the vacuum level at the water separator gradually
dropped to ten inches of mercury. System operating parameters were monitored over
the full course of the test. After eight hours of continuous operation the system
was shut down. The container was sealed, a low point drain valve opened, and the container
was allowed to cool. The container was monitored for drainage of free standing water
over the period of the next ten days as it was allowed to cool to burial condition
or below. No free standing water developed.
EXAMPLE 4
[0226] A comparative test with the best prior art system and procedures was conducted using
the cation resin of Example 1. The container was of the same type and configuration
as used in Example 1, except that it was fitted with a conical bottom and a hub and
lateral type water collection system, similar in all aspects to prior art systems.
[0227] The resin bed was heated to a temperature of approximately 95°F in order to duplicate
typical power plant conditions. Temperature sensors were placed at the center of the
resin bed and along the resin perimeter.
[0228] Folowing the standard operating procedures for prior art systems, suction was maintained
on the container water collection system eight hours a day for a period of three days
until the volume of water pumped from the container over the course of eight hours
was less than five gallons. The container was then allowed to cool to a core temperature
of less than 55°F in order to duplicate burial conditions. A total of approximately
40,000 ml (10.6 gallons) of free water drained from the container. This volume of
water represents approximately 0.75% of the total container contents, exceeding the
one-gallon criteria for disposal at the Hanford disposal site, the 0.5% by volume
free standing water requirements for carbon steel containers at the Barnwell disposal
site, and nearly exceeding the 1.0% criteria for high integrity containers at the
Barnwell facility.
[0229] It should be noted that the comparison test was conducted using resins which were
the easiest to dewater. Had the tests been conducted using spent, regenerated resins
the 1.0% criteria would probably have been exceeded as well.
EXAMPLE 5
[0230] The invention can be practically applied across a wide variation of particle characteristics
and container configurations. Those variables can be within or outside of the representative
operating region present in FIGURE 16. A practical application of applying the calculation
sequence to functional equipment follows.
Design Calculation Sequence
[0231] Fixing the particle characteristics, or range of characteristics, is prerequisite
to the design of a system. Referring to Equation 1, the following particle, container,
and fluid characteristics are fixed for the granular media application:
D
p = average particle diameter
e = interstitial void fraction
s = solid shape factor
L = depth of solids
T = air temperature.
[0232] The average particle diameter, D
p, is determined from original vendor data, a sieve analysis, or a direct particle
size count. It is required, and typically achievable, that the utility's particle
storage tank deliver the particles to the dewatering container in a manner such that
the particle size distribution is homogeneous. Even pressure drop and, therefore,
even air distribution are dependent on a homogeneous distribution of the particle
size. The interstitial void fraction, e, and solid shape factor, s, are determined
from published data for analogous particles of similar shape. An example of such published
data can be found in the reference for Equation 1.
[0233] The selection of the solids depth, L, is dependent on the container size. The selected
air temperature, T, is usually the beginning solids temperature. The heated air from
the blower, at the start of the operation, is rapidly cooled nearly to the particle
temperature. In fact, some evaporative cooling effects may be noticeable. A maximum
temperature of 120°F is checked since the maximum air viscosity and, therefore, the
maximum pressure drop occurs at that maximum temperature. The container inlet air
pressure is typically held constant at slightly below atmospheric pressure (for containment
of airborne radioactive particles within the system).
[0234] Several other items are specified at the start of the calculation sequence:
1. The container diameter.
2. The inlet airflow rate at standard conditioins.
3. The number of collector branches (lateral connection points).
4. The spacing between lateral orifices.
[0235] The air molecular weight, M, the gravitational constant, g
c, and the gas constant, R, are constants. The compressibility factor, z, is essentially
equal to one (1) at near atmospheric pressures. Now all the factors are given for
determining the particle bed pressure drop, or more precisely the absolute pressure
at the bottom of the particle bed.
[0236] The vessel cross-sectional area, empty vessel cross-sectional air velocity, and the
air viscosity at temperature T are determined. Then the modified Reynolds number per
Equation 2 can be calculated. The modified Reynolds number and the plot shown on FIGURE
15 are used to read off the modified friction factor, f
m. Only the laminar flow range of FIGURE 15 is used in virtually all applications.
However, if operation were to take place in the transition or turbulent range, then
the exponents to the (1-e) and s terms of Equation 1 would need to be modified according
to the reference.
[0237] Now all of the variables in Equation 1 are known, and the absolute pressure at the
bottom of the particle bed can be determined. The particle bed pressure drop is divided
by one velocity head, V²2g
c, to give h
v (see Eq. 7) and determine if the airflow has a sufficient number of velocity heads
to achieve the minimum requisite fluid flow through the particle bed; that is, h
v must be greater than or equal to H
MV.
[0238] Given the number of collector branches, the container diameter, and assumptions on
installation clearances (e.g., provision for endcaps 76) the total container length
of laterals can be determined. Since the orifice spacing is specified, the total lateral
length divided by the orifice spacing will give the total number of orifices on the
collector. The airflow rate divided by the total number of orifices will give the
airflow, w, for one orifice. Now the orifice diameter to pressure drop relationship
can be determined.
[0239] Referring to Equation 3, the orifice flow rate, w, and the gravitational constant
are known. The orifice coefficient of discharge, C, is virtually constant (0.63) for
most applications and varies by less than 10% for orifice to lateral diameter ratios
less than 0.5. The expansion factor, Y, is equal to one (1) for virtually all real
applications. The full determination of the expansion factor can be found in the reference
for Equation 3. The orifice upstream pressure, p₂, is equal to the pressure at the
bottom of the particle bed. The air density at the orifice entrance, ρ₁, is corrected
for the reduced pressure at the bottom of the slurry bed. The orifice to pipe lateral
diameter ratio, β, is raised to the fourth power and has little effect for a ratio
less than 0.5. Therefore, the ratio can be arbitrarily fixed at 0.25.
[0240] All variables are given, or derived, for Equation 3 except the orifice downstream
pressure, p₁, and the orifice cross-sectional area, A₂. A set of orifice areas, and
thereby the orifice diameters, are found for a set of orifice pressure drops. The
orifice diameter can be selected that corresponds to an orifice pressure drop that
is compatible with the overall mechanical system. The set of orifice diameters, lateral
diameter and pressure drops can be altered to suit the overall mechanical system by
changing the numbr of collector branches and/or the orifice spacing. However, the
distribution criteria cannot be altered. The number of branches and orifice spacing
cannot result in a greater open area between orifices than the test configuration
used to find the minimum number of velocity heads.
[0241] The selection of the proper orifice diameter and pressure drop is aided by the maldistribution
criteria. If it is greater than 5%, another orifice configuration is required. The
maldistribution number for each orifice to pressure drop relationship is derived from
Equations 4, 5, and 6. If the maldistribution criteria exceeds the minimum, then the
collector can be altered as described above.
Design Application Example
[0242] Given - The media to be dryed is a zeolite with an average diameter of 450 microns. The
particles are oblong with a rough surface; therefore a shape factor of 0.8 is selected.
The container is 48 inches in diameter and the same in height. Six collector branches
are subjectively selected in relation to the test case, with drilled through orifices
on 2 inch centers. The collector lateral's inside diameter is 0.5 inches. The inlet
airflow is 100 SCFM based on a ratio of the vessel cross-sectional area between the
test vessel and the new vessel application. The air temperature is 70°F.
[0243] Calculation - The calculation sequence follows the rationale 35 outlined above. The key results
are the following:
1. The number of particle bed velocity heads is 57.9.
2. The total number of orifices on the collector is 209.
3. The pressure at the bottom of the particle bed is 11.44 psia; therefore, the bed
pressure drop is 3.23 psi.
4. To achieve less than 5% maldistribution along the collector laterals, the orifice
pressure drop must be greater than 0.2 psi and less than the difference between atmospheric
pressure and the sum of the pressure drop across the bed of solids and the orifice
pressure drop; e.g., less than (14.7 - 3.23 - 0.2) = 11.24 psi.
5. The orifice diameters vary from .08 to .058 inches as the orifice pressure drop
varies from 1 to 5 psi.
6. If a 2 psi pressure drop were selected, the maximum and minimum collector flow
would be 254 and 43 SCFM, respectively, for 0.112 inch diameter orifices.
[0244] Conclusion - The calculated system is a conservative approach to drying the zeolite. The flow
rate could be reduced to the minimum number of velocity heads. A simple ratio of the
vessel cross-sectional area and flow rate in the test case to a new application does
not take into account the different characteristics of the air and particle bed. However,
because the test case used particles on the upper end of the expected size range,
a ratio method is conservative.
[0245] The thermodynamic section of the application is applicable to ion exchange resins.
To this example using inorganic zeolites the water uptake curves, FIGURES 19 and 20,
and the resultant operating curves, FIGURE 21, do not apply, as the water in the zeolite
is held in its pores by a mechanism that is less chemical and more due to capilary
action. Nevertheless, the attraction of water to the zeolite is amenable to measuring
the zeolite's water uptake for various relative humidities. That water uptake test
can be completed or the full size container (with the zeolite in its worst thermodynamic
case) can be repetitively dryed, while noting the humidity endpoint, and cooled to
the permanent storage temperature until there is no water drainage. The latter method
is more economical for specific applications on materials for which water uptake curves
do not exist.
EXAMPLE 6
Zeolite Heat Capacity Determination
[0246] An aluminosilicate zeolite similar to the mineral chazabite (e.g., Linde IE-95, Union
Carbide) is frequently used for selective removal of cesium and strontium from water.
The zeolite is oblong shaped and around 20 by 40 mesh or an effective diameter of
450 microns. The porosity of the zeolite is about 45 percent of the particle volume,
and the bulk density is 42 pounds per cubic foot. The molecular weight of water (MW
H20) is 18, and for the applicable aluminosilicate zeolite (MW
Zeo) it is 380. The heat capacities for water and the dry zeolite are 1 and 0.2 Btu/Lb.
F
o. It is assumed the entire pore volume of the zeolite is filled with water. Therefore,
for a one cubic foot basis, Equation 21A (see below) is used and the variables are
found as follows:
Eq. 12A: Dry Particle Density = (Dry Bulk Density)(1 - Void Fraction) 26 = 42(1 -
0.38)
Eq. 13A: Zeolite Weight = (Zeolite Volume) (Dry Particle Density) 26 = 1 x 26
Eq. 14A: Particle Volume = (Bulk Particle Volume) (1 - Void Fraction) 0.62 = 1(1 -
0.38)
Eq. 15A: Particle Water Weight = (Particle Volume) (Pore Fraction) x (Water Density)
17.38 = 0.62 x 0.45 x 62.3
Eq. 16A: Moles Water = M
H20 = Particle Water Weight/MW
H20 = 17.38/18 = 0.96
Moles Zeolite = M
Zeo = Zeolite Weight/MW
Zeo = 26/380 = 0.068
Eq. 17A: Total Moles = M
H20 + M
Zeo 1.03 = 0.96 + 0.068
Eq. 18A: Water Mole Fraction = X
H20 = Moles Water/Total Moles 0.93 = 0.96/1.03
Zeolite Mole Fraction = X
Zeo = Moles Zeolite/Total Moles 0.066 = 0.068/1.03
[0247] Referring to Equation 21A below, note the terms relating to the chemical salts in
the adsorbed water. Since only ion exchange resins possess a nearly true electrolytic
solution in the adsorbed water, the terms X
Chem and C
PChem do not apply to zeolites. This assumes the zeolites have been treating water that
is very dilute in disolved solids; otherwise the dissolved solids would have to be
accounted for in the absorbed water's head capacity, C
PH20. Inserting the values outlined above into Equation 21A gives the following result:
Eq. 19A: C
PPart = (0.93 x 1) + (0.066 x 0.2) = 0.943 Btu/lb.-°F.
EXAMPLE 7
Zeolite Water Uptake
[0248] The object of the foregoing heat capacity calculations is to determine how much adsorbed
water is available for condensation in the disposable container in the burial condition.
Ideally, there would be a plot of relative humidity versus the zeolite water content
over various adsorbed water chemical compositions. Then the humidity process endpoint
can be determined directly. This cannot be accomplished for most non-ion exchange
particles.
[0249] If an ion exchange resin were the object of the heat capacity determination, there
are several methods for determining the solution chemistry. The methods for determining
the mole fraction and mixture heat capacity would be the same. The chemical molar
fraction can be determined from the concentration of functional sites on the resin
and the number of hydration shells around those sites. If the number of hydration
shells is not known, then a judgement of the chemical concentration in the adsorbed
water can be made from the functional site concentration. The judgement can be based
on experience, analogous corrosion potential, equilibrium chemistry, the consistency
of the heat capacity over varying chemical concentrations, or other methods. The heat
capacity of the resultant chemical solution can be found in tabulated data.
[0250] However, a zeolite does not have the electrolytic solution characteristics of ion
exchange resins, but to a much lesser extent possesses hydrated layers. The hydrated
layers of a zeolite are at the particle matrix surface, as compared with being much
more tightly located at the functional sites of an ion exchange resin. Because of
the profound chemical differences of zeolite hydration versus functional site hydration,
it is not expected that chemical composition differences would be significant for
the vast majority of waste zeolites. While zeolites possess some chemical hydration
characteristics, like other non-ion exchange particles, the majority of the adsorbed
water is present due to pore diffusion.
[0251] The first step of determining the process endpoint is the same for all particles.
That step is finding the total amount of water that must be removed from the slurry
bed. The volume of water is found from Equation 10 and generalized as follows:
Eq. 20A: Q
Part = V
Part ρ
PartC
PPart(T
Part-T
∞)
where the variables are the same as for Equation 10 but generalized for any type of
particle. The variable T
∞ is the ultimate ambient temperature, which is typically the burial temperature of
55°F.
[0252] The process endpoint is simply when the total amount of adsorbed water is collected
from the discharge of the water separator. The invention provides a method of determining
when to start the measurement of that water, i.e., when the system has finished removing
the interstitial water and beginning to remove adsorbed water. When the mechanical
resistance of removing the interstitial water has ended, thermal energy is then required
to remove the adsorbed water as indicated by the humidity monitor. When the humidity
monitor begins to fall below 100 percent relative humidity, then the humidity/water
vapor energy gradient from the drying air to the surface of the adsorbed water is
the signal that a thermal energy difference has begun and the mechanical actions ceased.
[0253] Determining the total amount of water to be removed is a basic psychrometry problem.
The conductive heat loss of the container in the burial condition is assumed to be
negligible. While such a heat loss would be measurable, it is not a large factor at
the time of burial for most waste form temperatures. The insulating capabilities of
the particles was qualitatively observed during the system tests. The enthalpy of
evaporating the adsorbed water into the container of air is assumed equal to the enthalpy
of condensing that water on or near the container wall.
[0254] The dry bulb air temperature in the container, prior to processing, is equal to the
beginning bulk waste temperature. The beginning bulk waste humidity is at saturation.
Those two conditions of the bulk waste represent a point on the psychrometric chart
(see FIG. 18) termed the container exit/water separator entrance. That point moves
down and to the left of the saturation line or processing progresses. The condition
of the disposable container, when buried after sufficient time, is preferably near
the burial temperature on the saturated air line.
[0255] The beginning and ending enthalpies of the air/water mixture can be read off of the
diagonal lines 5 on the left side of the chart. Each point also corresponds to a water
content value that can be read off of the vertical axis 6 found on the right of the
chart. The water content difference divided by the enthalpy difference gives the number
of pounds of water per Btu. Note the pounds of dry air terms cancel each other. This
value multiplied by the heat content of the particles, as found in Equation 20A, results
in the poundage of water potentially available for condensation if it were not removed
from the particles.
[0256] For example, if in the disposable container there are 100 cubic feet of zeolites
that are saturated at 80°F, from Equation 20A the calculated heat content of the zeolite
in the disposable container is:
Q
Part = 100 x [42 x (1-0.38)] x 0.943 x (80-55) = 61,389 Btu.
[0257] The enthalpy of the vapor at 80° and 55°F is respectively 43.7 and 23.2 Btu per pound
of dry air. The corresponding water content of the vapor at those points is 0.022
and 0.0093 pounds of water per pound of dry air. Then the number of pounds of water
available for condensation is the following:
61,389 x [(0.022-0.0093)/(43.7-23.2)] = 38 pounds.
[0258] This is equivalent to about 4.5 gallons of water. This amount of adsorbed water would,
if it were not removed from the particles, condense in the burial condition and exceed
the regulatory limits for certain container types and burial sites. The amount of
water exiting the water separator would be measured. The beginning waste humidity
reading would be just below 100% relative humidity and noted at the time the 4.5 gallons
began collection. The entire container could be cooled to 55°F to verify that no free
water is generated. Several of these points would lead to processing endpoint curves
like those derived for ion exchange resins.
EXAMPLE 8
Thermal Application Design
[0259] Successfully drying particles depends on thermally removing sufficient water to preclude
free standing water formation in the burial condition. There are two methods used
for determining the process endpoint. The difference between the two methods stems
from the existence of water uptake data (water content versus humidity of contacting
air) for the particle type. If the data exists, then a purely quantitative method
is used. This is the case with most applicable ion exchange resins. Such data may
not exist for specialty resins, zeolites, carbons, and filter aids. For these particles
the humidity endpoint can be determined by direct test on the full scale system. Either
method for determining the process endpoint is applicable only to the removal of adsorbed
water.
Quantitative Thermal Design Application
[0260] A particle will be a mixture of three materials: relatively pure water, chemicals
in the water, and the substrate holding the water and chemicals. The heat capacity
values for each pure substrate are usually well documented. However, the heat capacity
value of the particle mixture usually is not documented. The mixture heat capacity
can be proportioned from the components by using molar fractions of the component
heat capacities. The mixture heat capacity is determined from Equation 9 and generalized
for all applicable materials as follows:
Eq. 21A: C
PPart = X
H2OC
PH2O + X
ChemC
PChem + X
SubC
PSub
wherein
C
PPart = heat capacity of particle mixture
X
H2O = molar fraction of water adsorbed in the particle
X
Chem = molar fraction of chemical salts in the particle
X
Sub = molar fraction of the particle's substrate
C
PH2O = heat capacity of water adsorbed in the particle
C
PChem = heat capacity of chemical salts in the particle
C
PSub = heat capacity of particle substrate.
[0261] Determining the boundary and, therefore, the molar fraction of water and the chemical
solution is not clear cut. For example, there is a certain degree of hydration and
ion disassociation around the ion exchange groups. At what distance from the ion exchange
group is the solution considered a chemical solution or reasonably pure water? There
are several ways to answer this question. They are:
1. Consider the entire solution to be a dilute chemical solution. In other words,
there is not any pure water and the chemical salts are distributed throughout the
adsorbed water.
2. Consider the chemical portion of the adsorbed water to be a 100% chemical solution.
This is the preferred method.
[0262] The mass of the chemical portion can be derived from resin capacity, assumptions
on the chemical type, equilibrium chemistry, or general analogy to other chemical
solutions. However, the contribution of the chemical solution to the overall particle
heat capacity is typically less than 1%. This is realistic since the heat capacity
of water is 3 times the chemical heat capacity, and the water molar fraction is over
40 times the chemical molar fraction. Therefore, whichever method is used to determine
the chemical mass, it is not significant to the final composite heat capacity value.
[0263] Once the heat capacity of the resin is determined, all of the factors needed to find
the particle's heat content available for water condensation at the burial temperature
are known:
- the particle heat capacity
- the particle volume in the process/disposal container
- density of the particles
- the bulk temperature of the particles
- the ultimate burial storage temperature.
[0264] With the above factors, the heat content applicable to evaporating adsorbed water
and condensing at the buried container walls is determined from Equation 10. The ambient
temperature of the particles, T
∞, is typically, the burial temperature of 55°F. The heat content divided by the water
heat of vaporization, or latent heat, gives the number of pounds of adsorbed water
that could condense in the process/disposal container as the particles cool from their
original temperature to the burial temperature. From here, determining the final relative
humidity drying endpoint depends on the existence of water uptake curves for the particular
waste form. In the absence of water uptake curves, the required volume of removed
water is measured starting when the relative humidity monitor drops below 100% R.H.
These alternative methods are described below.
Process Endpoint With Water Uptake Curves
[0265] FIGURE 20 is an example of water uptake curves. They are simply a plot of the particle
water content versus the humidity of the surrounding air for various chemical forms
of some specific resin types. The poundage of condensable water, as described above,
in the container divided by the total particle weight in the container will give the
value to be subtracted from the saturated water uptake value (i.e., the water uptake
value on FIGURE 20 corresponding to 100% R.H.). Then the corresponding relative humidity
at that water uptake value, on the curve corresponding to its chemical form, becomes
the process endpoint.
Process Endpoint Without Water Uptake Curves
[0266] Many non-ion exchange resin particles (carbons, zeolites, diatamaceous earth, etc.)
do not have known published water uptake curves. However, a method less direct than
an air relative humidity reading is available. Since the volume of water to be removed
is known, as described above, that volume of removed water can be measured as it is
removed from the water separator. The problem is determining when to start measuring
that volume.
[0267] If the measurement is taken too early, the water volume may contain a high level
of interstitial water and not enough bound water. The result would be condensation
of some adsorbed water prior to the container reaching the equilibrium burial temperature.
However, the point at which bound water is being removed is the point that some energy
is required to overcome the attraction of the water to the particle. That point is
indicated by a drop below 100% ralative humidity, and the water measurement can begin
at that point. When enough waste temperature to water removal volume relationships
are established, and verified by cooling a container, then process endpoint curves
can be developed and relative humidity can become the measurable endpoint value.
Other Process Endpoints
[0268] A slurry bed may not have the prerequisite bed rigidity or drying characteristics
as those previously mentioned. One example is powdered ion exchange resins. While
the water uptake curves exist, the gas fluid characteristics do not follow fixed bed
methods. The powdered material cracks as it drys and allows preferential airflow through
the slurry bed. The endpoint for such a system would be the same as for particles
without water uptake curves. The exiting water volume would be measured beginning
at a drop from 100% relative humidity. However, a historically based endpoint curve
probably could not be developed because of the random nature of the particle cracking.
[0269] While the present invention has been described in conjunction with preferred embodiments,
one of ordinary skill after reading the foregoing specification will be able to effect
various changes, substitutions of equivalents, and other alterations to the methods,
devices, and compositions set forth herein. It is therefore intended that the protection
granted by Letters Patent be limited only by the definition contained in the appended
claims and equivalents thereof.
1. A method of dewatering a slurry containing radioactive particles to a condition
for permanent storage, comprising the steps:
(a) removing substantially all interstitial water from the slurry, and
(b) removing a volume of adsorbed water from the particles such that at a predetermined
permanent storage temperature the particles will be just unsaturated with respect
to adsorbed water.
2. The method of Claim 1 wherein the radioactive particles comprise liquid treatment
media.
3. The method of Claim 2 wherein the liquid treatment media comprise one or more of
the group consisting of bead type ion exchange resins and powdered type ion exchange
resins.
4. The method of Claim 1 wherein the slurry comprises one or more particles of the
group consisting of bead type ion exchange resins, powdered type ion exchange resins,
filter aid materials, carbon particles, zeolites, filter sand, diatomaceous earth,
anthracite particles, and sludges.
5. The method of Claim 1 wherein the slurry comprises particles ranging from about
0.1 to about 1000 microns in diameter.
6. The method of Claim 5 wherein the particles have an average diameter greater than
about 20 microns.
7. The method of Claim 1 wherein a volume of adsorbed water removed from the particles
is at least equal to:
(QP/Δ H)/ρ
wherein
QP = the difference in particle heat content between the dewatering temperature and
the permanent storage temperature,
ΔH = the average of the water heat of vaporization at the dewatering temperature and
at the permanent storage temperature, the dewatering temperature being the temperature
of the particles at the beginning of step (b), and
ρ = the density of water.
8. The method of Claim 7 wherein:
QP = VP ρ P CP(TP-T∞)
wherein
VP = volume of the particles,
ρP = density of the particles,
CP = heat capacity of the particles,
TP = temperature of the particles at the beginning of step (b),
and
T∞ = the permanent storage temperature.
9. The method of Claim 8 wherein:
CP = XH2OCPH2O+XChemCPChem+XSubCPSub
wherein
XH2O = molar fraction of water adsorbed in the particles,
CPH20 = heat capacity of water adsorbed in the particles,
XChem = molar fraction of chemical salts in the particles,
CPChem = heat capacity of chemical salts in the particles,
XSub = molar fraction of the particle substrate, and
CPSub = heat capacity of particle substrate.
10. The method of Claim 1 further comprising the step:
(c) thereafter introducing the particles into a disposable container comprising a
particle-filled bottom region and a gas-filled top region.
11. The method of Claim 10 wherein the volume of water removed from the particles
in step (b) does not excessively unsaturate the particles such that any increase in
particle volume if the particles become further hydrated at the permanent storage
temperature will not exceed the volume of compressible gas in the container.
12. The method of Claim 1 wherein the adsorbed water is removed by contacting the
particles with a low humidity gas.
13. The method of Claim 10 comprising the steps:
(a) removing substantially all interstitial water from the slurry to form a particle
bed, and
(b) causing a low humidity gas to pass uniformly through the particle bed to remove
a volume of adsorbed water from the particles such that at the permanent storage temperature
the particles will be just unsaturated with respect to adsorbed water.
14. The method of Claim 13 wherein step (a) comprises:
(i) removing substantially all free standing water from the slurry to form a particle
bed, and
(ii) causing a low humidity gas to pass through the particle bed to remove substantially
all interstitial water from the particle bed.
15. The method of Claim 14 wherein the free standing water is pumped from the slurry.
16. The method of Claim 12 comprising the steps:
(a) removing substantially all interstitial water from the slurry to form a particle
bed, and
(b) removing a volume of adsorbed water from the particles by (i) causing a low humidity
gas to pass uniformly through the particle bed, (ii) thereafter separating water from
the gas, and (iii) dehumidifying the gas from step (ii) and circulating the dehumidified
gas through the particle bed in accordance with steps (i) and (ii) until a volume
of adsorbed water is removed from the particle bed such that at the permanent storage
temperature the particles will be just unsaturated with respect to adsorbed water.
17. The method of Claim 16 wherein the volume of adsorbed water removed from the particle
bed is monitored by measuring the water separated in step (ii).
18. The method of Claim 16 wherein the volume of adsorbed water removed from the particle
bed is monitored by measuring the relative humidity of the gas between steps (i) and
(ii).
19. The method of Claim 18 wherein the endpoint in step (iii) correlates with a relative
humidity endpoint on a dewatering endpoint curve of FIGURE 21.
20. The method of Claim 13 wherein at least step (b) occurs within a disposable container
comprising a gas-filled top region and a particle-filled bottom region.
21. The method of Claim 13 wherein steps (a) and (b) occur within a disposable container
comprising of a gas-filled top region and a particle-filled bottom region.
22. The method of Claim 20 wherein the disposable container comprises a vapor distributor
means selectively disposed within the container bottom region.
23. The method of Claim 22 wherein the low humidity gas enters the container top region
and passes through the particle bed and into the vapor distributor means before exiting
the container.
24. The method of Claim 22 wherein the low humidity gas enters the vapor distributor
means and passes through the particle bed and into the container top region before
exiting the container.
25. The method of Claim 20 further comprising the step:
(c) thereafter sealing the container.
26. The method of Claim 20 further comprising the steps:
(c) thereafter introducing additional radioactive particles to substantially fill
the container top region, the introduced particles being just unsaturated with respect
to adsorbed water at the permanent storage temperature, and
(d) thereafter sealing the container.
27. The method of Claim 21 wherein step (a) comprises:
(i) removing substantially all free standing water from the slurry to form a particle
bed,
(ii) causing a low humidity gas to pass through the particle bed to remove at least
some of the remaining interstitial water from the particle bed,
(iii) thereafter introducing additional radioactive particles to substantially fill
the container top region, the introduced particles being either saturated or unsaturated
with respect to absorbed water at the permanent storage temperature, and
(iv) thereafter removing substantially all interstitial water from the particle bed.
28. The method of Claim 27 further comprises the step:
(c) thereafter sealing the container.
29. The method of Claim 25 wherein the volume of adsorbed water removed from the particles
in step (b) does not execessively unsaturate the particles such that any increase
in particle volume if the particles become further hydrated at the permanent storage
temperature will not exceed the volume of compressible gas in the container.
30. The method of Claim 25 wherein the volume of adsorbed water removed from the particle
bed is determined by measuring the relative humidity of the gas after passing through
the particle bed.
31. The method of Claim 30 wherein the volume of absorbed water removed from the particle
bed corresponds to a minimum relative humidity dewatering endpoint, %R.H.₂, defined
as follows:
Ff = (%R.H.₁-%R.H.₂)(1 - Ff)/(1.394 x 62.36)
wherein
Ff = volume fraction of compressible gas in the container, and
%R.H.₁ = a particle-specific relative humidity endpoint on a dewatering endpoint curve
of FIGURE 21.
32. The method of Claim 26 wherein the particles in the container are not excessively
unsaturated such that any increase in particle volume if the particles become further
hydrated at the permanent storage temperature will not exceed the volume of compressible
gas in the container.
33. The method of Claim 28 wherein the particles in the container are not excessively
unsaturated such that any increase in particle volume if the particles become further
hydrated at the permanent storage temperature will not exceed the volume of compressible
gas in the container.
34. The method of Claim 1 wherein the permanent storage temperature is approximately
55°F.
35. A method of dewatering a slurry containing radioactive particles to a condition
for storage at a predetermined permanent storage temperature, comprising the steps:
(a) bringing the slurry to or just below the permanent storage temperature, and
(b) thereafter removing substantially all interstitial water from the slurry.
36. The method of Claim 35 wherein the permanent storage temperature is approximately
55°F.
37. The method of Claim 35 wherein the slurry is brought to no more than about 5°F
below the permanent storage temperature.
38. A process for dewatering nuclear wastes to a condition for permanent storage,
comprising the steps:
(a) providing a slurry comprising waste media particles having the following characteristics:
e = interstitial void fraction,
s = solid shape factor, and
Dp = equivalent diameter of solids, average;
(b) forming a substantially rigid bed of the particles, the slurry bed having the
following characteristics:
A = cross-sectional area, and
L = height of the bed;
and providing at least one collector at the bottom of the slurry bed, the collector
having a pattern of orifices distributed substantially uniformly across the slurry
bed horizontal cross section, the orifices opening into at least one conduit of stated
hydraulic diameter, the collector having the following characteristics:
A₂ = cross-sectional area of each orifice,
DH = diameter of the conduit,
β = orifice to conduit diameter ratio, and
F = friction factor of the conduit;
(c) removing substantially all free standing water from the bed;
(d) causing a relatively dry gas to flow uniformly through the bed and into the collector,
the gas having the following characteristics:
T = temperature,
M = molecular weight,
µ = viscosity,
z = compressibility factor, and
ρ = density;
the uniform flow being defined by the following head (h₂) to flow (G) relationship:
(i) the gas head at the bottom of the particle bed, h₂, is as follows:

wherein
ρ₂ = density of the gas at the bottom of the bed,
p₁ = pressure of the gas at the top of the bed,
R = the gas constant,
gc = the gravitational constant, and
fm = fluid flow friction factor defined by the function = f(DpG/µ) and determined by reference to FIGURE 15;
(ii) the minimum flow (G) is as follows:

wherein
Ch = the velocity head friction constant,
ρ₁ = density of the gas at the top of the bed, and
HMV = a stated minimum number of velocity heads ranging from less than ten to about fifty;
(iii) given (i) and (ii), the flow to head loss relation must fall within the two
roots of the following equation:

wherein
% maldistribution = a stated integer or fraction ranging from less than one to about
ten,
hp1 = the fluid head inside the collector at the orifice where the conduit flow is highest,
as defined by
hp1 = 1/ρ₃[h₂ρ₂-(w/CYA)²(1-β)⁴/2gcρ₁]
wherein
ρ₃ = density of the gas inside the conduit,
w = the average orifice flow rate,
C = the orifice coefficient of discharge, and
Y = the expansion factor, and
hp = is the head loss due to the flow in the conduit as defined by
hp =[(4FLc/3DH)-1](Vi²/2gc)
wherein
Lc = length of the conduit, and
Vi = the maximum velocity inside the conduit;
and the uniform flow being caused by a blower having a pressure to flow performance
rating at least equal to that determined in (i) and (ii) and the lower of the rates
determined in (iii);
(e) continuing step (d) to remove at least an amount of adsorbed water from the particles
such that at the permanent storage temperature the particles will be unsaturated with
respect to adsorbed water.
39. The process of Claim 38 wherein the waste media particles range in diameter from
about 150 to about 1000 microns.
40. The process of Claim 38 wherein Dp ranges from about 150 to about 1000 microns.
41. The process of Claim 38 wherein HMV is in the range of from about 10 to about 50 and % maldistribution is in the range
of from about 1 to about 10.
42. The process of Claim 41 wherein HMV is about 26 and % maldistribution is about 5.
43. The process of Claim 38 wherein HMV is less than about 10 and % maldistribution is less than about 1.
44. The process of Claim 38 wherein
(hp + hp1) < 14.7.
45. The process of Claim 38 wherein the velocity head friction constant is about 1.1
x 10⁻⁷.
46. The process of Claim 38 wherein the waste media particles comprise at least one
ion exchange resin.
47. The process of Claim 45 wherein an amount of adsorbed water is removed from the
particles such that at the permanent storage temperature the particles will be just
unsaturated with respect to adsorbed water.
48. The process of Claim 47 further comprising the step:
(f) thereafter sealing the particles in a disposal container comprising a particle-filled
bottom region and a gas-filled top region.
49. The process of Claim 48 wherein the amount of adsorbed water removed from the
particles does not excessively unsaturate the particles such that any increase in
particle volume if the particles become further hydrated at the permanent storage
temperature will not exceed the volume of compressible gas in the container.
50. A process for dewatering powdered nuclear wastes to a condition for permanent
storage, comprising the steps:
(a) providing an aqueous slurry comprising powdered waste media particles having the
following characteristics:
e = interstitial void fraction,
s = solid shape factor, and
Dp = equivalent diameter of solids, average;
(b) forming a substantially rigid bed of the particles, the slurry bed having the
following characteristics:
A = cross-sectional area, and
L = height of the bed;
and providing at least one collector at the bottom of the slurry bed, the collector
having a pattern of orifices distributed substantially uniformly across the slurry
bed cross section, the orifices opening into at least one conduit of stated hydraulic
diameter, the collector having the following characteristics:
A₂ - cross-sectional area of each orifice,
DH = diameter of the conduit,
β = orifice to conduit diameter ratio, and
F = friction factor of the conduit;
(c) uniformly removing substantially all free standing water from the bed, the water
having the following characteristics:
µ = viscosity, and
ρ = density;
the uniform water flow being defined by the following head (h₂) to flow (G) relationship:
(i) the water head at the bottom of the particle bed, h₂, is as follows:
h₂ = 1/ρ [p₁-(2G²/gcρ) (fmL(1-e)²/Dps²e³)]
wherein
p₁ = atmospheric pressure,
G = mass flow rate of the water,
gc = the gravitational constant, and
fm = water flow friction factor defined by the function = f(DpG/µ) and determined by reference to FIGURE 15; and
(ii) given (i), the flow rate to head loss relationship must fall within the two roots
of the following equation:

wherein
% maldistribution = an integer or fraction ranging from about 0.25 to about 20,
hp1 = the water head inside the collector at the orifice where the conduit flow is highest,
as defined by
hp1 = 1/ρ [h₂ρ-(w/CYA)²(1-β)⁴/2gcρ]
wherein
w = the average orifice water flow rate,
C = the orifice coefficient of discharge, and
Y = the expansion factor, and
hp = the head loss due to the water flow in the conduit, as defined by
hp = [(4FLc/3DH)-1] (Vi²/2gc)
wherein
Lc = length of conduit, and
Vi = the maximum water velocity inside the conduit;
and the uniform water flow being caused by a blower having a pressure to flow performance
rating at least equal to that determined in (i) and the lower of the rates determined
in (ii);
(d) thereafter causing a relatively dry gas to flow through the particle bed and into
the collector;
(e) continuing step (d) to remove at least an amount of adsorbed water from the particles
such that at the permanent storage temperature the particles will be unsaturated with
respect to adsorbed water.
51. The process of Claim 50 wherein the powdered waste media particles range in diameter
from about 0.1 to about 150 microns.
52. The process of Claim 52 wherein Dp is greater than about 20 microns.
53. The process of Claim 50 wherein % maldistribution is about 5.
54. The process of Claim 50 wherein
(hp + hp1) < 14.7.
55. The process of Claim 50 wherein the waste media particles comprise at least one
ion exchange resin.
56. The process of Claim 55 wherein an amount of adsorbed water is removed from the
particles such that at the permanent storage temperature the particles will be just
unsaturated with respect to adsorbed water.
57. The process of Claim 56 further comprising the step:
(f) thereafter sealing the particles in a disposal container comprising a particle-filled
bottom region and a gas-filled top region.
58. The process of Claim 57 wherein the amount of adsorbed water removed from the
particles does not excessively unsaturate the particles such that any increase in
particle volume if the particles become further hydrated at the permanent storage
temperature will not exceed the volume of compressible gas in the container.
59. An apparatus for dewatering a slurry containing radioactive particles, comprising:
means for causing a gas to pass uniformly through the slurry.
60. The apparatus of Claim 59 further comprising:
means for thereafter separating water from the humidified gas, and
means for thereafter dehumidifying the gas and circulating the dehumidified gas through
the slurry.
61. The apparatus of Claim 59 further comprising:
means for monitoring the relative humidity of the gas that has passed through the
slurry.
62. An apparatus for dewatering a slurry containing radioactive particles, comprising:
a disposable container with a top region and a bottom region,
an influent port means for introducing the slurry into the container bottom region,
a gas inlet means for introducing gas into the container top region,
a vapor collector means selectively disposed in the container bottom region to draw
the gas uniformly across the entire cross section of the slurry bed, for receiving
interstitial water and also humidified gas that has passed from the container top
region through the slurry, and
a vapor outlet means, connected to the vapor collector means, for removing the water
and the humidified gas from the container.
63. The apparatus of Claim 62 wherein the vapor collector means comprises at least
one manifold disposed in planar array, the manifold being provided with orifices in
spaced array, and the orifices being covered by filter means to prevent entry of particles
into the manifold.
64. The apparatus of Claim 63 wherein at least one manifold is disposed on the floor
of the disposable container.
65. The apparatus of Claim 63 wherein a plurality of manifolds are disposed in spaced
horizontal tiers in the bottom region of the container.
66. The apparatus of Claim 62 wherein the floor of the container bottom region is
flat.
67. The apparatus of Claim 62 wherein the disposable container is provided with a
flow interrupter.
68. The apparatus of Claim 62 wherein the vapor collector is selectively disposed
to perform within the operating region bounded by the coordinates A-B-C-D in FIGURE
16.
69. The apparatus of Claim 62 wherein the vapor collector is selectively disposed
to provide the uniform gas flow defined in step (d) of Claim 38.
70. The method of Claim 30 wherein the volume of absorbed water removed from the particle
bed corresponds to a minimum relative humidity dewatering endpoint, %R.H.₂, defined
as follows:
Ff = (%R.H.₁ - %R.H.₂)(1 - Ff)/(1.394 x 62.36)
wherein
Ff = volume fraction of compressible gas in the container, and
%R.H.₁ = the particle-specific relative humidity endpoint at which the particles would
be just unsaturated at the permanent storage temperature.