Tacharanite has received additional attention in the context of natural analogue studies undertaken to investigate the possible effects of an alkaline plume developing around a high-level radioactive waste repository. In the frame of the
geological disposal of
high-level radioactive waste and
spent fuel, large amounts of concrete will be used in the near-field of a deep
geologic repository. Cementitious materials will serve as waste immobilization matrix, buffer materials, backfill materials, and also for the lining of galleries (
shotcrete and concrete blocks). The high pH prevailing in concrete pore water is beneficial for immobilizing
radionuclides (low
solubility, high
sorption and limitation of the
microbial activity). Since the mid-1980, many studies were initiated after the pioneering works of Atkinson
et al. (1985, 1988, 1990) at
UKAEA (
Harwell) to assess the time dependence of pH in a radioactive waste repository. Simultaneously, also emerged the question of the geochemical perturbation induced by an alkaline plume developing in an argillaceous environment. Indeed, the integrity of the repository near field could be compromised as large quantities of concrete will be placed in direct contact with the host rock (
clay sedimentary formation or
granite). The pore water of the hardened cement paste (HCP) of concrete is hyperalkaline with a high pH. When
Portland cement is used, young cement water (YCW) rich in
potassium hydroxide (KOH) and
sodium hydroxide (NaOH) has initially a very high pH of ~ 13.5. Latter in the cement degradation stages, evolved cement water (ECW) has a pH of 12.5 controlled by the dissolution of
portlandite (). The
hydroxide anions () released by the concrete in contact with clay pore water, or granite
groundwater, slowly diffuse into the host geological formation where they interact with the various mineral phases of the surrounding rock. Inside a
backfilled
gallery, and in the seals of
drifts and
shafts the same process will also affect the
clay minerals of the
bentonite buffer material. Water-rock interactions lead to complex
dissolution and
precipitation reactions at the interface between cement and clay materials. The main reaction products of an
alkaline
plume in clay are calcium silicate hydrates (C-S-H) and zeolites potentially contributing to clogging the
porosity at the cement-clay
interface. As tacharanite is a member of the family of the calcium aluminium silicate hydrates (C-A-S-H), it has also been identified as a potentially newly formed minerals in the frame of the cement–clay interactions and taken into account for the
geochemical modelling studies. == See also ==