WAC 246-249-050
Acceptable radioactive waste forms and
packaging. (1) Packaging.
(a) Wastes shall be packaged in conformance with the
conditions of the license issued to the site operator to which
the waste will be shipped. Where the conditions of the site
license are more restrictive than the provisions of these
regulations, the site license condition shall govern. As a
minimum, radioactive waste must be packaged in such a manner that
waste containers received at the facility do not show:
(i) Significant deformation;
(ii) Loss or dispersal of contents;
(iii) An increase in the external radiation levels recorded
on the manifest, within instrument tolerances; or
(iv) Significant containment degradation due to rust or
other chemical actions.
(b) Wastes shall not be packaged for disposal in cardboard
or fiberboard. Wood boxes are prohibited after February 28,
1987.
(c) A process control program shall be used which validates
the following:
(i) Liquid waste shall be packaged in sufficient approved
absorbent material to absorb twice the volume of the liquid,
solidified using an approved solidification agent, or stabilized
using an approved stabilization agent.
(ii) Solid wastes containing liquid shall contain as little
free-standing and noncorrosive liquid as is reasonably
achievable, but in no case shall the liquid exceed one percent of
the volume.
(d) Waste shall not be readily capable of detonation or of
explosive decomposition or reaction at normal pressures and
temperatures, or of explosive reaction with water.
(e) Waste shall not contain, or be capable of generating
quantities of toxic gases, vapors, or fumes harmful to persons
transporting, handling, or disposing of the waste. This does not
apply to radioactive gaseous waste packaged in accordance with
(g) of this subsection.
(f) Pyrophoric materials contained in wastes shall be
treated, prepared, and packaged to be nonflammable.
(g) Waste in gaseous form must be packaged at a pressure
that does not exceed 1.5 atmospheres at 20°C. Total activity
shall not exceed 100 curies (3.7 x 1012 Bqs) per container. Class
A gaseous waste shall be contained within United States
Department of Transportation specification cylinders. Specific
approval of the department is required if the gaseous waste is
Class B or C.
(h) Wastes containing hazardous, biological, pathogenic, or
infectious material shall be treated to reduce the maximum extent
practicable the potential hazard from the nonradiological
materials. Wastes subject to regulation under Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) are not allowed at the
disposal site.
(i) Radioactive consumer products, the use and disposal of
which is exempt from licensing control, may be received without
regard to concentration limits of WAC 246-249-040 Table 2
provided the entire unit is received and is packaged with
sufficient sorbent material so as to preclude breakage and
rupture of its contents. This subsection allows the disposal of
such consumer products as intact household or industrial smoke
detector units containing Americium-241 foils and radium or
radioactive materials incorporated into self-luminous devices and
electron tubes.
(2) The following requirements are intended to provide
stability of the waste. Stability is intended to ensure that the
waste does not degrade and affect overall stability of the site
through slumping, collapse, or other failure of the disposal unit
and thereby lead to water infiltration. Stability is also a
factor in limiting exposure to an inadvertent intruder, since it
provides a recognizable and nondispersible waste form.
(a) Classes B, C, and A stable waste shall have structural
stability. A structurally stable waste form will generally
maintain its physical dimensions and its form, under the expected
disposal conditions such as weight of overburden and compaction
equipment, the presence of moisture, and microbial activity, and
internal factors such as radiation effects and chemical changes. Structural stability can be provided by the waste form itself,
processing the waste to a stable form, or placing the waste in a
disposal container or structure that provides stability after
disposal.
(b) Notwithstanding the provisions in subsection (1)(c) and
(d) of this section, liquid waste, or waste containing liquid,
shall be converted into a form that contains as little
free-standing and noncorrosive liquid as is reasonably
achievable, but in no case shall the liquid exceed one percent of
the volume of the waste when the waste is in a disposal container
designed to ensure stability, or 0.5 percent of the volume of the
waste for waste processed to a stable form.
(c) Void spaces within the radioactive waste and between the
waste and its package shall be reduced to the extent practicable.
Unless specifically approved by the department, void spaces in
Class A stable, Class B, and Class C waste packages shall be less
than 15 percent of the total volume of the disposal package,
provided the disposal package is not a high integrity container
nor contains activated metals that are too large to put into high
integrity containers. For Class B and Class C waste packages
containing activated metals, voids shall be reduced to the extent
practicable, and shall be demonstrated to be structurally stable
by any of the methods discussed in (a) of this subsection.
[Statutory Authority: RCW 70.98.050 and 70.98.080. 91-16-109
(Order 187), § 246-249-050, filed 8/7/91, effective 9/7/91. Statutory Authority: RCW 43.70.040. 91-02-049 (Order 121),
recodified as § 246-249-050, filed 12/27/90, effective 1/31/91. Statutory Authority: RCW 70.98.080. 87-01-031 (Order 2450), §
402-62-060, filed 12/11/86.]