Interaction of hyperalkaline fluid with fractured rock:: Field and laboratory experiments of the HPF project (Grimsel Test Site, Switzerland)

被引:34
|
作者
Maeder, Urs K. [1 ]
Fierz, Thomas
Frieg, Bemd
Eikenberg, Jost
Ruethi, Max
Albinsson, Yngve
Moeri, Andreas
Ekberg, Stefan
Stille, Peter
机构
[1] Univ Bern, Bern, Switzerland
[2] SOELXPERTS AG, Monchaltdorf, Switzerland
[3] Nagra, Wettingen, Switzerland
[4] Paul Scherrer Inst, Villigen, Switzerland
[5] Chalmers Univ, Gothenburg, Sweden
[6] Geotech Inst AG, Bern, Switzerland
[7] CNRS, Ctr Geochim Surface, Strasbourg, France
关键词
hyperatkaline; high-pH plume; fractured rocks; field experiment; core infiltration experiment; radionuclide tracers; reactive transport; Ca-Si-hydrate;
D O I
10.1016/j.gexplo.2005.09.006
中图分类号
P3 [地球物理学]; P59 [地球化学];
学科分类号
0708 ; 070902 ;
摘要
The HPF project (Hyperalkatine Plume in Fractured Rock) at the Grimsel Test Site (Switzerland) comprised an underground long-term field experiment in a water-conducting shear zone, in situ radionuclide transport experiments, two laboratory core infiltration experiments, and supporting studies. The feasibility of longer-term field experiments under difficult geochemical conditions has been demonstrated, accompanied by advances in equipment design, measurement and analysis techniques, and in the integration and interpretation of a large and diverse hydrological, structural and geochemical data set. A hyperalkaline solution (K-Na-Ca-OH, pH = 13.4 at 15 degrees C) representing an early leachate of Portland cement degradation was used in both the laboratory and field experiment. Results to date indicated a decrease in the overall field transmissivity of the tested shear zone over a duration of 2.5 years accompanied by focussing of flow as evidenced by repeat dipole tracer testing with Na-fluorescein, Br-82, I-131, Na-24, and Sr-85. The associated evolution in fluid chemistry and more direct evidence indicated the in situ formation of Ca-Si-hydrates. A core infiltration experiment was performed with a sample from a Grimsel shear zone where the fault gouge had been preserved in situ. The hydraulic behaviour was characterised with a NaCl tracer breakthrough experiment. This was followed by 9 months of infiltration with hyperalkaline solution at 15 degrees C. The experiment was carried out at constant and controlled head difference through a rock core under hydrostatic confining pressure. A gradual decrease in flow rate (hydraulic transmissivity) by a factor of 25 was observed over the duration of the experiment. This reduction is attributed to clogging of flow paths by secondary mineral precipitates (Ca-Si-hydrates) as a result of rock-cement leachate interaction. The HPF project has so far demonstrated conclusively the following issues: (1) hyperalkaline fluids are very reactive under ambient conditions and, in this case, cause significant dissolution and precipitation that induce changes to the flow field; (2) the general scenario of the high-pH plume is therefore valid and needs to be addressed in the performance assessment of a deep repository in fractured rock; (3) a trend towards self-sealing of flow-paths is observed in both the field and laboratory experiment; (4) the phenomena associated with the high-pH plume can be effectively addressed by a combination of laboratory and field experiments supported by evidence from natural analogues. Results are encouragingly similar and, hence, transferable between the laboratory and the field scale if boundary conditions and set-up are selected carefully, despite the large heterogeneity present at both scales. (c) 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:68 / 94
页数:27
相关论文
共 21 条
  • [1] The Grimsel (Switzerland) migration experiment: Integrating field experiments, laboratory investigations and modelling
    Hadermann, J
    Heer, W
    JOURNAL OF CONTAMINANT HYDROLOGY, 1996, 21 (1-4) : 87 - 100
  • [2] COLLOIDS IN WATER FROM A SUBSURFACE FRACTURE IN GRANITIC ROCK, GRIMSEL TEST SITE, SWITZERLAND
    DEGUELDRE, C
    BAEYENS, B
    GOERLICH, W
    RIGA, J
    VERBIST, J
    STADELMANN, P
    GEOCHIMICA ET COSMOCHIMICA ACTA, 1989, 53 (03) : 603 - 610
  • [3] Hyperalkaline cement leachate-rock interaction and radionuclide transport in fractured host rock (HPT project)
    Mäder, U
    Frieg, B
    Puigdomenech, I
    Decombarieu, M
    Yui, M
    SCIENTIFIC BASIS FOR NUCLEAR WASTE MANAGEMENT XXVII, 2004, 807 : 861 - 866
  • [4] Eighteen years of steel–bentonite interaction in the FEBEX in situ test at the Grimsel Test Site in Switzerland
    Jebril Hadi
    Paul Wersin
    Vincent Serneels
    Jean-Marc Greneche
    Clays and Clay Minerals, 2019, 67 : 111 - 131
  • [5] Tracer and reactive transport modelling of the interaction between high-pH fluid and fractured rock:: Field and laboratory experiments
    Pfingsten, Wilfried
    Paris, Benoit
    Soler, Josep M.
    Maeder, Urs K.
    JOURNAL OF GEOCHEMICAL EXPLORATION, 2006, 90 (1-2) : 95 - 113
  • [6] The Grimsel Migration Experiment: field injection-withdrawal experiments in fractured rock with sorbing tracers
    Hoehn, E
    Eikenberg, J
    Fierz, T
    Drost, W
    Reichlmayr, E
    JOURNAL OF CONTAMINANT HYDROLOGY, 1998, 34 (1-2) : 85 - 106
  • [7] Development and testing of radionuclide transport models for fractured rock: examples from the Nagra/JNC Radionuclide Migration Programme in the Grimsel Test Site, Switzerland
    Smith, PA
    Alexander, WR
    Kickmaier, W
    Ota, K
    Frieg, B
    McKinley, IG
    JOURNAL OF CONTAMINANT HYDROLOGY, 2001, 47 (2-4) : 335 - 348
  • [8] EIGHTEEN YEARS OF STEEL-BENTONITE INTERACTION IN THE FEBEX IN SITU TEST AT THE GRIMSEL TEST SITE IN SWITZERLAND
    Hadi, Jebril
    Wersin, Paul
    Serneels, Vincent
    Greneche, Jean-Marc
    CLAYS AND CLAY MINERALS, 2019, 67 (02) : 111 - 131
  • [9] Reactive transport modelling of cement-groundwater-rock interaction at the Grimsel Test Site
    Carme Chaparro, M.
    Saaltink, Maarten W.
    Soler, Josep M.
    PHYSICS AND CHEMISTRY OF THE EARTH, 2017, 99 : 64 - 76
  • [10] The Colloid Formation and Migration (CFM) project at the Grimsel Test Site (Switzerland): Results from the homologue tests
    Schaefer, T.
    Seher, H.
    Hauser, W.
    Walther, C.
    Degueldre, C.
    Yamada, M.
    Suzuki, M.
    Missana, T.
    Alonso, U.
    Trick, T.
    Blechschmidt, I.
    GEOCHIMICA ET COSMOCHIMICA ACTA, 2009, 73 (13) : A1168 - A1168