Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 September 2012
The use of computer simulations in the performance assessment for a repository for spent nuclear fuel, are in many cases the only method to get information on how the rock-repository system will work. One important factor is the solubility of the elements released if the repository is breached. This solubility may be determined experimentally or simulated. Ifit is simulated, several factors such as thermodynamical uncertainties will affect the reliability of the results. If these uncertainties are assumed to be small, the composition of the water used in the calculations may play a major part in the uncertainties in solubility. The water composition, in tum, is either determined experimentally or calculated through water-rock interactions. Thus, if the mineral composition of the rock is known, it is possible to foresee the water composition. However, in most cases a determination of the rock composition is made from drilling cores and is thus quite uncertain. Therefore, if solubility calculations are to be based on water properties calculated from rock-water interactions another uncertainty is introduced. This paper is focused on uncertainty and sensitivity analysis of rock-water interaction simulations and the uncertainties thus obtained are propagated through a program making uncertainty and sensitivity analysis of the solubility calculations. In both cases the latin hypercube sampling technique have been used. The results show that the solubilities are in most cases log normal distributed while the different elements in the simulated groundwater in some cases diverge significantly from such a distribution. The numerical results are comforting in that the uncertainty intervals of the solubilities are rather small, i.e. up to 30%.