How do you handle nuclear waste that will be radioactive for millions of years, keeping it from harming people and the environment?
It isn’t easy, but Rutgers researcher Ashutosh Goel has discovered ways to immobilize such waste – the offshoot of decades of nuclear weapons production – in glass and ceramics.
Goel, an assistant professor in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering,
is the primary inventor of a new method to immobilize radioactive
iodine in ceramics at room temperature. He’s also the principal
investigator (PI) or co-PI for six glass-related research projects
totaling $6.34 million in federal and private funding, with $3.335
million going to Rutgers.
“Glass is a perfect material for
immobilizing the radioactive wastes with excellent chemical durability,”
said Goel, who works in the School of Engineering.
Developing ways to immobilize iodine-129, which is especially
troublesome, is crucial for its safe storage and disposal in underground
geological formations.
The half-life of iodine-129 is 15.7 million years, and it can disperse rapidly in air and water, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
If it’s released into the environment, iodine will linger for millions
of years. Iodine targets the thyroid gland and can increase the chances
of getting cancer.
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