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Why can we throw nuclear waste volcano?

Why can we throw nuclear waste volcano?

The only reason to incinerate miscellaneous radioactive garbage would be to reduce its overall volume, so it’s easier to sequester. As with the incineration of medical waste, this produces dangerous emissions that would pop right out of a volcano.

Can you throw rubbish into a volcano?

“Putting waste into this volcano would destroy its natural beauty and appeal,” says Simpson. Of course, a volcano that is actively erupting is a pretty dangerous place to hang out. Approaching the vent—the crater at the top of the volcano—with a garbage truck full of rubbish would be extremely hazardous.

What Can nuclear waste be turned into?

Closing the fuel cycle involves recycling the nuclear waste as new fuel. Since the main component of nuclear waste is Uranium-238 (which can be transmuted to Plutonium, especially with advanced breeder reactors), we can get more energy out of the waste than in a once-through cycle (see factoid 2 to see how much).

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Where do you put nuclear waste?

Disposal of low-level waste is straightforward and can be undertaken safely almost anywhere. Storage of used fuel is normally under water for at least five years and then often in dry storage. Deep geological disposal is widely agreed to be the best solution for final disposal of the most radioactive waste produced.

Is it possible to dispose of nuclear waste in a volcano?

Nuclear and other toxic waste can indeed be disposed of in volcanoes, but so can ordinary garbage. Your question presupposes that some exotic method must be used for nuclear waste because it is so super dangerous.

Can a volcanic volcano melt nuclear fuel?

Volcanoes aren’t hot enough to melt the zirconium (melting point 3,371˚) that encases the fuel, let alone the fuel itself: The melting point of uranium oxide, the fuel used at most nuclear power plants, is 5,189˚. The liquid lava in a shield volcano pushes upward, so the rods probably wouldn’t even sink very deep, Rowe says.

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What would happen if a nuclear power plant was built on volcanoes?

And that’s the real problem. A regular lava flow is hazardous enough, but the lava pouring out of a volcano used as a nuclear storage facility would be extremely radioactive. Eventually it would harden, turning that mountain’s slopes into a nuclear wasteland for decades to come.

Are volcanoes still the perfect storage spots for our waste?

Given that the center of boiling-hot volcanoes isn’t a place most people spend their time and the fact that volcanoes are often found in remote areas, not surrounded by large population centers, it would seem like volcanoes are still the perfect storage spots for our waste, even if they can’t “destroy” the waste.