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Preparing an Oak Ridge fission production lab for demolition
Preparing an Oak Ridge fission production lab for demolition

Yahoo

time16-05-2025

  • Science
  • Yahoo

Preparing an Oak Ridge fission production lab for demolition

The U.S. Department of Energy's Oak Ridge Office of Environmental Management (OREM) notched a significant cleanup achievement after crews finished characterizing all 21 hot cells at a Cold War facility, This is a complex task that informs plans to safety remove waste and prepare the structure for demolition, according to a news release from cleanup contractor UCOR. As part of the characterization work, OREM and UCOR identified the types and levels of contamination in the former Fission Production Development Lab, known as Building 3517, at Oak Ridge National Laboratory. 'Completing this phase sets the stage for some much bigger accomplishments,' Steve Clemmons, OREM's acting ORNL portfolio federal project director, said in the news release. 'This is one of the most difficult facilities we're responsible for addressing, and it's eventual removal will be a meaningful risk reduction in ORNL's central campus area.' OREM and UCOR's progress is steadily reducing the number of high-risk excess contaminated facilities at ORNL, clearing away hazards and opening space for researchers to advance innovation and make their next big discovery. Crews could not enter the hot cells to conduct the characterization work due to the extremely high radiation and contamination levels inside them. Hot cells are heavily shielded rooms designed to safely contain highly radioactive material during operations. Operating from 1958 through 1989, Building 3517 was built to recover large quantities of fission products from waste generated in reactor fuel reprocessing operations. It also supported processing and recovery of other reactor-produced isotopes. Crews drilled through concrete covers to access each cell, and those openings allowed them to gather remote video footage and perform initial radiological surveys. The team also created a mobile enclosure that served as a containment area and proved to be incredibly helpful during drilling and data collection. Employees were able to move the enclosure as they progressed from one cell to the next. 'This is an outstanding effort by our workforce to complete investigation and initial characterization of these hot cells,' UCOR ORNL Cleanup Area Project Manager Chad York stated. 'For this team to execute this high-risk work scope, encountering significant levels of contamination daily, and perform the work without incident speaks volumes to the experience and knowledge this team has.' OREM has also successfully removed ORNL's single largest source of legacy radioactivity material, which was located at Building 3517. A partnership with private industry removed a 500-watt radioisotope thermoelectric generator from storage to be recycled into a source of energy for new power systems used by the U.S. Department of Defense. This article originally appeared on Oakridger: Preparing an Oak Ridge fission production lab for demolition

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