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REACTIVE TRANSPORT MODELING OF THE INTERACTION BETWEEN WATER AND

Rock, porosity 1%. 10 mm. Rock, porosity 5%. 1 mm. Cementitious grout. 10 mm. Rock, porosity 5%. Rock, porosity 1%. REACTIVE TRANSPORT MODELING OF THE INTERACTION BETWEEN WATER AND A CEMENTITIOUS GROUT IN A FRACTURE 1 Josep M. Soler, 2 Marja Vuorio, 2 Aimo Hautojärvi

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REACTIVE TRANSPORT MODELING OF THE INTERACTION BETWEEN WATER AND

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  1. Rock, porosity 1% 10 mm Rock, porosity 5% 1 mm Cementitious grout 10 mm Rock, porosity 5% Rock, porosity 1% REACTIVE TRANSPORT MODELING OF THE INTERACTION BETWEEN WATER AND A CEMENTITIOUS GROUT IN A FRACTURE 1Josep M. Soler, 2Marja Vuorio, 2Aimo Hautojärvi 1-Institute of Environmental Assessment and Water Research (IDAEA-CSIC), 08034 Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain 2-POSIVA OY, FI-27160 Eurajoki, Finland Grouting of water-conducting fractures with low-alkali cement is foreseen by Posiva (Finnish nuclear waste management agency) for the potential future repository for high-level nuclear waste in Finland (ONKALO). A possible consequence of the interaction between groundwater and grout is the formation of high-pH solutions which will be able to react with the host rock (gneisses) and alter its mineralogy and porosity. A reactive transport modeling study of this possible alteration has been started following the recommendations from Posiva. CrunchFlow has been used for the calculations. First, the hydration of the low-alkali cement has been modeled using results from the literature as a guide (Fig. 1). The hydrated cement is characterized by the absence of portlandite and the presence of a C-S-H gel with a Ca/Si ratio about 0.8 after tens of years (Ca/Si is about 1.7 in Ordinary Portland Cement). Afterwards, a one-dimensional system simulating the contact between a grouted section of a fracture and the gneiss has been studied (Fig. 2). Diffusion is the only solute transport mechanism in this case. The results from the simulations show a very fast (days to weeks) sealing of porosity at the rock-grout interface. The precipitation of C-S-H, and also ettringite in some cases, is responsible for this fast sealing of porosity. The mixing by diffusion of a high-pH Ca-rich solution from the grout and a Si-rich solution from the rock (plagioclase dissolution) causes this precipitation. Finally, new calculations have simulated the interaction between flowing water and grout and the alteration of the host rock as this alkaline water flows beyond the grouted section of the fracture (Fig. 3). The calculations include the hydration and simultaneous leaching of the grout through diffusive exchange between the porewater in the grout and the flowing water in the fracture. The formation of an alkaline plume is extremely limited when the low-pH grout is used. And even when using a grout with a lower silica fume content the extent and magnitude of the alkaline plume are rather minor. These results are in qualitative agreement with monitoring at ONKALO. (3) 2D GROUT-ROCK-WATER INTERACTION CONCEPT IMPLEMENTATION RESULTS Initial groundwater composition (400 m depth): Na-Ca-Cl water I = 0.21 mol/kg_H2O (1) HYDRATION OF LOW-ALKALI CEMENT (2) 1D GROUT-ROCK INTERACTION CONCEPT • Batch-type calculation (no solute transport). • Irreversible kinetic rate laws for the dissolution of the clinker phases • (alite, belite, aluminate, ferrite) and silica fume (CSH-00). • Local equilibrium (fast kinetics) for all the other phases. pH, t = 1 h 1D domain PRIMARY CEMENT PHASES MINERAL DISTRIBUTION AT t ≈ 2 days pH, t = 0.9 a HYDRATION PRODUCTS Grout Rock pH, t = 30 a Grout Rock Gout-rock interface at x = 5e-4 m SOLUTE CONCENTRATIONS AT t ≈ 2 days COMPARISON WITH MONITORING (SHALLOWER BOREHOLES) • The final C-S-H gel has a Ca/Si ratio about 0.8. • Portlandite only precipitates at early stages and is quickly consumed. • Hydration takes about 100 years to complete and is controlled by the • dissolution of silica fume. • Better knowledge on the dissolution rates of silica fume could place • better constraints on the precise timing and duration of the process. Model: mixing zone • Fast (days) sealing of porosity at the grout-rock interface due mainly to • the precipitation of ettringite and tobermorite. • The reaction is driven by the contact between a high-pH Ca-rich • solution from the grout and a Si-rich solution (plagioclase dissolution) • from the rock. • Good agreement between model and observations, despite modeling • performed with generic parameters (flow, transport, geometries, dimensions) • not intended to simulate exactly the monitoring boreholes and the different • groundwater composition (less saline).

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