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Video: Hanford Plant ‘Banks’ on System for Waste Analysis

View this video about how laboratory technicians at the Hanford Site’s Waste Treatment and Immobilization Plant have been building proficiency in using a system that will safely transfer samples of radioactive waste.

Office of Environmental Management

March 22, 2022
minute read time
. This autosampling system functions much like a pneumatic tube system at a bank drive-thru.
. This autosampling system functions much like a pneumatic tube system at a bank drive-thru.

RICHLAND, Wash. – View this video about how laboratory technicians at the Hanford Site’s Waste Treatment and Immobilization Plant have been building proficiency in using a system that will safely transfer samples of radioactive waste from the Low-Activity Waste (LAW) Facility to the plant’s Analytical Laboratory for analysis. This autosampling system functions much like a pneumatic tube system at a bank drive-thru. Samples collected from LAW Facility process vessels are put into containers and transferred to the lab through a tube system by using pressurized air. During Direct-Feed Low-Activity Waste Program operations, plant chemists and technicians will analyze about 3,000 waste samples per year. Their analyses will confirm the correct “recipe” of glass-forming materials needed to mix with the waste during vitrification, or immobilization in glass, for safe disposal. This step ensures the plant produces a consistent glass form that meets all regulatory requirements and standards for disposal at Hanford’s Integrated Disposal Facility. Click here for the video of the testing.

Tags:
  • Environmental and Legacy Management
  • Nuclear Energy
  • Energy Analysis
  • Waste-to-Energy
  • Decarbonization