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Hanford contractor settles fraud suit for $3.45M
Hanford Site services contractor Hanford Mission Integration Solutions (HMIS) has agreed to pay the Department of Justice $3.45 million as part of a settlement agreement resolving allegations that HMIS overcharged the Department of Energy for millions of dollars in labor hours at the nuclear site in Washington state.
Rob P. Rechard, Lawrence C. Sanchez, Holly R. Trellue
Nuclear Technology | Volume 144 | Number 2 | November 2003 | Pages 201-221
Technical Paper | Radioactive Waste Management and Disposal | doi.org/10.13182/NT03-4
Articles are hosted by Taylor and Francis Online.
This paper presents the mass, concentration, and volume required for a critical event to occur in homogeneous mixtures of fissile material and various other geologic materials. The fissile material considered is primarily highly enriched uranium spent fuel; however, 239Pu is considered in some cases. The non-fissile materials examined are those found in the proposed repository area at Yucca Mountain, Nevada: volcanic tuff, iron rust, concrete, and naturally occurring water. For 235U, the minimum critical solid concentration for tuff was 5 kg/m3 (similar to sandstone), and in goethite, 45 kg/m3. The critical mass of uranium was sensitive to a number of factors, such as moisture content and fissile enrichment, but had a minimum, assuming almost 100% saturation and >20% enrichment, of 18 kg in tuff as Soddyite (or 9.5 kg as UO2) and 7 kg in goethite. For 239Pu, the minimum critical solid concentration for tuff was 3 kg/m3 (similar to sandstone); in goethite, 20 kg/m3. The critical mass of plutonium was also sensitive to a number of factors, but had a minimum, assuming 100% saturation and 80-90% enrichment, of 5 kg in tuff and 6 kg in goethite.