IRVINE, Calif. & TOKYO & HOUSTON - Monday, November 3rd 2014 [ME NewsWire]
Project to Mature Kurion’s Modular Detritiation System for Possible Deployment at Fukushima
Technology
to Offer Tritium Treatment Alternative to Commercial Nuclear Power
Plant Operators, Creating Zero-Liquid Release Plants
(BUSINESS
WIRE)-- Kurion, Inc., an innovator in nuclear and hazardous waste
management, announced that it received a grant of one billion Japanese
Yen (approximately 10 million USD) from Japan’s Ministry of Economy,
Trade and Industry (METI) to demonstrate the company’s cost-effective
tritium-removal technology for possible deployment at Fukushima.
Kurion’s Modular Detritiation System is one of three technologies
approved for the “Demonstration Project for Verification Tests of
Tritium Separation Technologies” from a field of 182 submissions. Kurion
has played an active role in the cleanup at Fukushima since the
development of its cesium-adsorption system in 2011 in the weeks
following the earthquake and tsunami that devastated the site; this
agreement represents the company’s fourth major project to assist the
site.
“We are honored to be selected by the Ministry of Economy,
Trade and Industry to demonstrate the economical effectiveness of
Kurion’s detritiation technology,” said Kurion Founder and President
John Raymont. “We have assembled a team of globally renowned experts to
monitor the project and attest to the efficacy, scalability and
economics of our technology to successfully treat the tritium
accumulating at the Fukushima site. The demonstration project will begin
immediately and will take place at Kurion’s detritiation facility.”
The Tritium Challenge at Fukushima
Today
there are more than 400,000 tons of contaminated water stored in tanks
at Fukushima, a number that is growing at the rate of 400 tons per day.
Submissions for the tritium-removal project required the ability to
treat 800,000 tons of tritiated water. TEPCO has already installed two
types of systems to remove contaminants from the stored water: Kurion’s
Mobile Processing System (KMPS) and the Multi-nuclide Removal Systems
known as ALPS.
While the KMPS and ALPS remove contaminants in the
water, they do not remove tritium. That is because the decontamination
of tritium (T) is particularly problematic: it is a special form of
hydrogen that forms tritiated water (HTO vs. H2O), which does not lend
itself to removal by conventional technologies. This is due to the fact
that the water molecule itself is modified, rather than the contaminant
being carried along in water in suspended or dissolved form. As a
result, tritiated water is particularly difficult to treat and can
spread easily if it escapes into the environment.
Raymont added, “We
recognize the urgency of the situation as water accumulates at the
Fukushima site. While the specified completion date for the project is
March 2016, it is our goal to accelerate the demonstration project and
provide the necessary data by the end of 2015 to enable the METI, TEPCO
and the Japanese people to make an informed decision about the tritium
contamination at Fukushima.”
At the Fukushima site, space is another
constraint. Kurion’s modular system has a small footprint, and it can
scale rapidly to process the water in the required time frame to
minimize additional storage requirements.
“The Kurion approach for
treating tritium at Fukushima offers TEPCO an unlikely option and
benefit: it creates a significant Hydrogen feedstock for Japan’s
‘hydrogen economy’ and supports the METI 2015 Hydrogen Initiative to
establish hydrogen as an energy source for cars. The 800,000 tons of
tritiated water at Fukushima would generate about 90,000 tons of H2,”
said Raymont.
The Challenge of Economically Removing Tritium
The
industrial process of removing tritium from water has historically
focused on cleaning highly contaminated “heavy water” for recycling back
into nuclear reactors, such as the process used for CANDU reactors.
However, this technology is prohibitively expensive for use with light
water reactors. Kurion’s Modular Detritiation System is a unique,
patent-pending technology based on advances to the proven heavy water
Combined Electrolysis Catalytic Exchange (CECE) process. The system
converts tritiated water (HTO) to gaseous Hydrogen (H2), gaseous Oxygen
(O2) and gaseous Tritium (HT); it then separates Tritium (T) for
stabilization, enabling the safe disposition of the clean H2 and O2 gas
streams (e.g., resold as chemical feedstock, flared to atmosphere, or
recombined as H2O).
“Kurion has performed extensive tests on our
Modular Detritiation System using a simulant of the contaminated water
at the same tritium concentration levels found at the Fukushima site,”
said Dr. Gaëtan Bonhomme, Kurion’s Chief Technology Officer, who led the
demonstration of the detritiation technology. “These tests on tritiated
water indicate that Kurion’s system successfully isolates the tritium,
significantly reduces the volume of final waste, and can scale to meet
the challenge at Fukushima.”
Many detritiation solutions have
difficulty achieving an adequate decontamination factor when starting at
low contamination factors. Kurion achieves this by adjusting certain
parameters of its equipment and internal recycles. As a result, Kurion
can uniquely modify the system’s goals to meet customer objectives. The
system does not produce any liquid waste and concentrates the tritium so
the small volume can be easily dispositioned.
Global Applications for Tritium-Removal in Commercial Nuclear Sector
Bill
Gallo, Kurion CEO, added, “Kurion’s detritiation technology also has
possible long-term applications for commercial nuclear plants. As we
mature this technology, our goal is to provide operators of light
pressurized water reactors an economical alternative to the controlled
release of tritium into the environment and allow them to achieve a
zero-liquid release status. This would eliminate community concerns and
strengthen nuclear energy’s status as a clean energy source.”
ABOUT KURION
Kurion
creates technology solutions to access, separate and stabilize nuclear
and hazardous waste to isolate it from the environment. Kurion’s suite
of technologies and engineering capabilities offer a platform to address
the most-challenging nuclear and hazardous waste sites worldwide.
Founded in 2008, Kurion is backed by leading energy investors Lux
Capital, Firelake Capital Management and Acadia Woods Partners. The
company is headquartered in Irvine, Calif., and has facilities in
Richland, Wash., Houston, Texas, Loveland, Colo., Idaho Falls, Idaho,
and Tokyo, Japan. For more information, please visit www.kurion.com.
Contacts
For Kurion, Inc.
Katie Wood Znameroski
Phone: +1 (650) 801-7952
Fax: +1 (650) 508-8336
katie.wood@zenogroup.com
www.kurion.com
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