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Encyclopedia > Low level waste

Low-level waste (LLW) is a term used to describe nuclear waste that does not fit into the categorical definitions for high-level waste (HLW), spent nuclear fuel (SNF), transuranic waste (TRU), or certain byproduct materials known as 11e(2) wastes, such as uranium mill tailings. In essence, it is a definition by exclusion, and LLW is that category of radioactive wastes that do not fit into the other categories. If LLW is mixed with hazardous wastes, then it has a special status as Mixed Low-Level Waste (MLLW) and must satisfy treatment, storage, and disposal regulations both as LLW and as hazardous waste. While the bulk of LLW is not highly radioactive, the definiton of LLW does not include references to its activity, and some LLW may be quite radioactive, as in the case of radioactive sources used in industry and medicine. A Russian fissile material storage facility Radioactive waste is waste material containing radioactive chemical elements which does not have a practical purpose. ...

Contents


Regulation

The strict definition for LLW is made in the Nuclear Waste Policy Act of 1982.


The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) and agreement states regulates LLW that is produced from commercial activities such as nuclear power, and industrial and medical applications of radioactivity.


The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) is self-regulating, and manages its own LLW, most of which is byproducts of the development and manufacture of nuclear weapons. DOE regulates the handling of all its radioactive wastes under DOE Order 435.1 Radioactive Waste Management.


Disposal

Depending on who "owns" the waste, its handling and disposal is regulated differently. The NRC as yet has no LLW disposal sites under its direct supervision. The DOE has dozens of LLW sites under management. The largest of these exist at DOE Reservations around the country (e.g. the Hanford Reservation, Savannah River Site (now Savannah River National Laboratory), Nevada Test Site, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Idaho National Laboratory, to name the most significant).


LLW should not be confused with high-level waste (HLW) and spent nuclear fuel (SNF), the disposal of both of which is slated for Yucca Mountain or some similar yet-to-be-developed repository. LLW should also not be confused with transuranic waste (TRU). TRU wastes from the nuclear weapons complex is currently disposed at the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP) near Carlsbad, New Mexico.


External links

NRC description of low-level waste


See also

  • high level waste
  • transuranic waste
  • spent nuclear fuel
  • mixed waste

Mixed waste is defined in the United States as waste containing radioactive material and hazardous waste as defined in the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA). ...

References

Fentiman, Audeen W. and James H. Saling. Radioactive Waste Management. New York: Taylor & Francis, 2002. Second ed.


  Results from FactBites:
 
"LOW-LEVEL" RADIOACTIVE WASTE - NIRS (992 words)
High-Level Radioactive Waste is: the irradiated fuel from the cores of nuclear reactors, the liquid and sludge wastes that are left over after irradiated fuel has been reprocessed (a procedure used to extract uranium and plutonium), the solid that would result from efforts to solidify that liquid and sludge from reprocessing.
The highly radioactive and long-lived reactor wastes are included in the "low-level" waste category along with the much less concentrated and generally much shorter-lived wastes from medical treatment and diagnosis and some types of scientific research.
By contrast, common medical waste elements include Technetium-99m, with a half-life of 6 hours and a hazardous life of 2.5-5 days; Galium-67, half-life of 78 hours and hazardous life of 1-2 months; and Iodine-131, with its half-life of 8 days and hazardous life of 80-160 days.
Nuclear Waste Task Force - Low-Level Radioactive Waste - Sierra Club (2421 words)
The wastes deemed "Classes B and C" are higher in radioactive concentrations and tend to contain isotopes that have very long hazardous lives.
We all surely agree that the radioactive wastes we (all) have allowed to be produced for half a century pose a significant biological hazard to humans, to many other life forms and ecosystems; and that they must be isolated from the biosphere for the full duration of their hazardous lives.
Third, we can recommend that the focus of waste management be shifted away from the notion and technologies of permanent "disposal" to the real reason for the need to prevent radioactive materials and wastes from entering the environment: namely, the hazard posed to health, safety, genetic integrity, and the environment by exposures to ionizing radiation.
  More results at FactBites »

 

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