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In-Situ Stress Measurement - Results of Experiments Performed at the Asse Salt Mine - Federal Republic of Germany
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 February 2011
Abstract
High-level nuclear wastes are heat generating wastes. Heat will be transferred to the surrounding salt formation. This heating of the host rock will result in an increased temperature and in stress changes.
From 1983 through 1985 two underground tests were conducted in the Asse Salt Mine (Federal Republic of Germany) in which among others thermally induced stress changes were investigated.
In the Temperature Test 6 which was conducted at the 750 m-level only electrical heaters were used to simulate the heat generating high-level waste. Three hydraulic stress monitoring stations were arranged in the un-heated area at a distance of about 40 meters to the central heater. Measurements using AWIO flat jacks were also carried out in the heated region of the Temperature Test Field 6 (TVF 6).
The joint US/FRG Brine Migration Test (BMT) - a nuclear waste repository simulation experiment - was performed at the 800 m-level and used radioactive sources and electrical heaters to impose the heat load on the host rock. Stress change measurements during this experiment were performed using hydraulic pressure cells and straingaged stressmeters.
During 1985 an experimental area for the first in-situ test disposal of high-level radioactive sources was created at the 800 m-level within the Asse anticline structure. Thirty high-level radioactive canisters will be emplaced in six down-boreholes located in two test galleries in the experimental area. There is one additional borehole in each gallery equipped only with electrical heaters. Hydraulic pressure cells, AWID flat jacks, and straingaged stressmeters were installed in the HAW-test field for stress change measurements.
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- Copyright © Materials Research Society 1989