Investigations of deteriorated concrete from the liner of the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant Waste Shaft

1992 
During inspections of the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant Waste Shaft in May 1990, patchy areas of apparently degraded concrete were observed on the inner surface of the shaft liner between approximately 810 feet and 900 feet below the surface. The apparent cause of this degradation is chemical reaction of the concrete with magnesium-bearing brine in the annulus between the concrete liner and the host rock. The greater thickness of the degraded layer below the joint may be related to the different chemical compositions that were determined by analyses of the paste portions of concrete samples from above and below the joint. The analytical results support a complex mechanistic explanation of concrete degradation observed behind the liner and in the joint: chemical weakening of the concrete paste; cracking by precipitation of solids in pores; and increased permeability due to calcium chloroaluminate formation. Additional sampling, analyses, and regular monitoring are worth considering to bound the vertical extent of Waste Shaft liner degradation, detect concrete liner degradation in other shafts, and measure any ongoing degradation that may be occurring.
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