10114 XCD WM Symposium 2011 • February 2011 • Trim: 8.375˝ x 10.875˝ • Spine: 0.3125˝

WM Symposia

1628 E. Southern Avenue, Ste. 9-332 Non-profit organization dedicated to education Tempe, AZ 85282 USA and opportunity in waste management

WMS Supporters: WM2011 • American Nuclear Society • American Society of Mechanical Engineers • OECD – Organization for Economic Co-Operation and Development Global Achievements and • Nuclear Energy Agency • The Nuclear Institute Challenges in Waste Management • Roy G. Post Foundation • Société Française d’Energie Nucléaire • Waste Management Education and Research Consortium Final Program The conference is organized in cooperation with the World Nuclear Association, the US Department of Energy, the US Regulatory Commission, the US Environmental Protection Agency, the US Department of February 27 – March 3, 2011 Defense, and the International Atomic Energy Agency.

www.wmsym.org Phone: 480-557-0263 Phoenix Convention Center, West Building Phoenix, Arizona 10114 XCD WM Symposium 2011 • February 2011 • Trim: 8.375˝ x 10.875˝ • Spine: 0.3125˝

Roy G. Post Foundation Benefit Golf Tournament 2011

Held at the Raven Golf Club at South Mountain in Phoenix on February 26th; The Roy G. Post Foundation Benefit Golf Tournament provides funding for scholarships for students in careers focusing on the advancement of safe management of nuclear materials. Please join us for the 2010 – 2011 Roy G. Post Scholarship presentation on Tuesday, March 1st at the Honors & Awards Luncheon.

Thank you to our 2011 Post Foundation Golf Sponsors for their Support!

Tournament Host

Silver Sponsors

The Roy G. Post Foundation is a non-profit organization formed by his students, peers and protégés to provide scholarships to students to develop careers in the safe management of nuclear materials and to participate in the annual WM Symposium. Dr. Post was the founding chief executive of WM Symposia, the sponsor of the annual international Waste Management conference. For more information on the Roy G. Post Foundation, please visit: www.roygpost.org

WM2011 FINAL PROGRAM TABLE OF CONTENTS

WM2011 Schedule of Events ...... 2 Global Achievements and Challenges in Waste Management ...... 3 Meeting Contacts & WMS Officers and Directors…...... 4 WM Program Advisory Committee (PAC) Members ...... 5 Conference Registration Registration Information ...... 6 Transportation – Shuttle, Taxis, Car Rental and Light Rail ...... 7 Lunches, Conference Proceedings and Insight Newsletter .... ……………………………. 8 Speaker & Co-Chair Information ...... 9 Special Meetings, Training and Events Saturday – PAC Meeting ...... 11 Sunday – First Time Attendee, Student Assistant & Opening Reception ...... 11 Monday – Plenary, ASME Radwaste Committee Meeting and Receptions ...... 11 Tuesday – Honors Luncheon, Best of AZ and Women of Waste Management ...... 13 Wednesday – Rustler’s Rooste Reception/Dinner ...... 13 Thursday – US DOE/US NRC Workshop and PAC Meeting ...... 13 Performance Assessment Sessions ...... 13 Scholarships, Honors and Awards at the Tuesday Luncheon ...... 15 Guest Tours and Activities ...... 16 Maps Metro Light Rail ...... 19 Phoenix Convention Center (PCC) Walking & Parking Guide ...... 20 PCC, West Building, Lower Level Registration/Exhibit Hall ...... 21 PCC, West Building, Level Three Breakfasts/Plenary/Lunches ...... 22 PCC, West Building, Level One Technical Sessions and A/V Support ...... 23 Approved Acronyms List ...... 24 Technical Program - Schedule at a Glance ...... 25 Technical Program - Sessions 1 - 101 ...... 29 Poster Sessions/Hours Displayed Each Day ...... 78 Authors Index ...... 79 Exhibition and Marketplace Exhibitor List Alphabetically with Booth Number ...... 87 Exhibitors List by Booth Number ...... 91 Exhibitors with Contact Information in Alphabetically Order ...... 93

www.wmsym.org WM2011 SCHEDULE OF EVENTS All Sessions will take place at the West Building - Phoenix Convention Center unless noted otherwise. All Buses for Off-Site Events & Tours will load from the Hyatt Regency Phoenix – Monroe Street exit.

SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 2011 7:00 a.m. – 8:00 p.m. Guest Tour – Grand Canyon* 8:00 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. Roy G. Post Foundation Fundraising Golf Tournament – The Raven Golf Club 8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. Registration Open – Lower Level 5:00 p.m. – 6:00 p.m. Individual PAC Meetings by Track for WM2012 Topic Development – Hyatt Regency 6:00 p.m. – 9:30 p.m. PAC Meeting and Dinner – Hyatt Regency Phoenix

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2011 8:30 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. WMS Board of Directors Meeting – Hyatt Regency Phoenix 9:30 a.m. – 1:30 p.m. Guest Tour – Sonoran Desert Hike* 1:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. Registration Open – Lower Level 3:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. First Time Attendee Orientation – Level One, 106B 4:00 p.m. – 4:45 p.m. Student Assistant Training – Level One, 106C 5:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. Welcome Reception and Exhibit Hall Open – Lower Level, Exhibit Hall

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 2011 7:00 a.m. - 8:00 a.m. Speaker’s Breakfast – Level Three 7:30 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. ASME Radwaste System Committee Meeting – Hyatt Regency Phoenix 8:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m. Registration Open - Lower Level 8:00 a.m. – 10:00 a.m. Guest Program Continental Breakfast - Hyatt Regency Phoenix 8:00 a.m. – 9:45 a.m. Opening Plenary Session – Level Three 8:30 a.m. - 6:00 p.m. Exhibit Hall Open – Lower Level 9:30 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. Guest Tour – Spa Day* 10:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Technical Sessions 2 – 26 – Level One 12:00 p.m. - 1:15 p.m. Keynote Luncheon – Level Three 2:30 p.m. - 3:00 p.m. Refreshment Break in Exhibit Hall – Lower Level 5:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m. International Welcome Reception in Exhibit Hall - Lower Level 6:00 p.m. - 7:30 p.m. Students and Young Professionals Networking Reception – Level One, 106C 7:00 p.m. – 10:00 p.m. Activity: Phoenix by Night Walking Tour* - PCC Adams & 3rd Street / Lighted Sign

TUESDAY, MARCH 1, 2011 7:00 a.m. - 8:00 a.m. Speaker’s Breakfast – Level Three 7:00 a.m. – 5:30 p.m. Guest Tour – Sedona & Native Ruins Jeep Tour* 7:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m. Registration Open - Lower Level 8:00 a.m. – 10:00 a.m. Guest Program Continental Breakfast - Hyatt Regency Phoenix 8:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Technical Sessions 27 – 55 – Level One 9:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m. Exhibit Hall Open - Lower Level 10:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m. Guest Tour – Cooking Class with Chef Vincent* 12:00 p.m. - 1:15 p.m. Honors and Awards Luncheon – Level Three 2:30 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. Refreshment Break in Exhibit Hall – Lower Level 5:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m. Best of Arizona Reception in Exhibit Hall – Lower Level 6:00 p.m. - 7:30 p.m. Women of Waste Management (WoWM) Panel & Networking Reception – Level One, 105B

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 2, 2011 7:00 a.m. - 8:00 a.m. Speaker’s Breakfast – Level Three 7:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m. Registration Open - Lower Level 8:00 a.m. – 10:00 a.m. Guest Program Continental Breakfast - Hyatt Regency Phoenix 8:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Technical Sessions 56 – 86 – Level One 9:00 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. Exhibit Hall Open - Lower Level 12:00 p.m. -1:15 p.m. ASME ICEM 2011/2012 Orientation and Planning Meeting – Level One, 104AB 2:30 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. Refreshment Break in Exhibit Hall – Lower Level 6:30 p.m. - 10:00 p.m. Networking Reception & Dinner – Rustler’s Rooste* - Bus Loading at 6:00 p.m.

THURSDAY, MARCH 3, 2011 7:00 a.m. - 8:00 a.m. Speaker’s Breakfast – Level One 7:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Registration Open – Level One 8:00 a.m. – 10:00 a.m. Guest Program Continental Breakfast - Hyatt Regency Phoenix 8:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Technical Sessions 87 - 100 – Level One 12:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m. WM2012 PAC Meeting and Luncheon – Level One, 105BC 1:00 p.m. – 5:45 p.m. US NRC/US DOE/IAEA Workshop* – Session 101 – Level One, 102ABC 5:45 p.m. – 6:45 p.m. US NRC/US DOE/IAEA Reception – Level One Foyer

FRIDAY, MARCH 4, 2011 8:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. US NRC/US DOE Public Workshop – Hyatt Regency Phoenix

* - Separate Registration Fees; Schedule Subject to Change

2 GLOBAL ACHIEVEMENTS AND CHALLENGES IN WASTE MANAGEMENT

It gives me great pleasure to welcome you to The aim of the WM Board and the Program the 37th Annual Waste Management Advisory Committee is to put on a program that Conference, WM2011. you find interesting, stimulating and informative. If you have ideas on how to We’ve made it our mission to build a conference improve the conference, please let us know. that equips you with the best practices from around the world and a return on investment I would like to thank the WM team for their that’s clear and measureable. Over two efforts and our sponsors for their contributions thousand scientists, engineers and managers that enhance what we can accomplish. Thanks attend the conference from companies and also to our attendees and exhibitors who make agencies around the world. the conference so exciting.

In recognition of the growing drive towards new We are a non-profit organization with the aim of reactor builds and the need to demonstrate that promoting education and opportunity and your nuclear waste management is well developed, participation helps us to further these we have adopted the theme: objectives.

Global Achievements and Challenges I hope you have a very profitable time. in Waste Management.

The technical program is comprehensive with over 500 papers and 101 technical sessions and panels and of course complemented by an Fred Sheil extensive exhibition. Chairman - WM Symposia Sheil Consulting, Ltd, United Kingdom There will be the opportunity for networking both in the formal activities but also in the WM2011 Conference range of informal and social events organized both by the Conference and participating February 27 – March 3, 2011 companies. The annual Waste Management Conference, WMS is proud to partner with the US NRC/US presented by WM Symposia (WMS), a non-profit doe and the IAEA on a topical workshop, “Low- organization dedicated to education and Level Waste (LLW) Perfomance opportunity in waste management, is widely Assessment, the Safety Case (PRISM) and regarded as the premier international Long-Term Monitoring”, to be presented on conference for the management of radioactive Thursday, March 3, 2011. This workshop is materials and related topics. Now for the 37th included in a Full Technical badge or available year, the WM2011 Conference will convene in as an add-on to your registration. Please see the Phoenix Convention Center (PCC), located the registration desk for more information. at 111 N. Third Street in the West Building, across from the Hyatt Regency Phoenix.

3 Meeting Contacts & WMS Officers and Directors

WMS Mailing Address: WMS Board of Directors 1628 E. Southern Avenue, Suite 9-332 Tempe, AZ 85282 USA Larry Camper, US NRC Dorthy Davidson, AREVA, NP V: +1 480-557-0263 F: +1 520-829-3550 W: www.wmsym.org Raul Deju, EnergySolutions Facebook: WM Symposia George Dials, B&W Technical Services Group Twitter: http://twitter.com/WMSymposia James Fiore, Consultant Managing Director - James W. Voss James Gallagher, Gallagher Consulting Group E: [email protected] Heinz Geiser, GNS, Germany Deputy Managing Director & Program Advisory William T. Gregory III, Vinculum Committee (PAC) Chair - Gary A. Benda E: [email protected] Lawrence Harmon, Project Enhancement Corp. V: +1 803-345-2170 Steven P. Kadner, Canberra Aquila, Inc. Deputy PAC Chair - Linda Lehman John Longenecker, Longenecker & Associates E: [email protected] John Mathieson, NDA, UK V: +1 612-867-9725 Jack L. McElroy, Consultant Conference Manager - Mary E. Young Lance Mezga, Oak Ridge National Laboratory E: [email protected] Sue J. Mitchell, GEM Technologies, Inc. Exhibits & Sponsorships Coordinator – Melanie Mamoru Numata, JGC Technologies Research, Ravalin E: [email protected] Japan

Technical Papers Coordinator – Allison Porter Michelle Rehmann, HER Creative Solutions LLC E: [email protected] Nancy Rothermich, Lawrence Berkley National Lab

Registration – Jenny Seffrood Fred Sheil, Sheil Consulting, Ltd., UK E: [email protected] Robert F. Williams, WTA, Inc.

Lodging Coordinator - Sherry Roberts-Chavez E: [email protected] James W. Voss, The Terra Verde Group

Conference Newsletter “Insight” Gary Benda, Bartlett Services, Inc. Editors: Linda Ulland and Linda Lehman E: [email protected] WMS Board Members Emeritus

WMS Corporate Officers Ron K. Bhada, New Mexico State University Chairman of the Board Paul Crawley, Consultant Fred Sheil, Sheil Consulting, Ltd., UK Scott Dam, ASD E&C President Howard M. Frederick, Consultant James Gallagher, Gallagher Consulting James Glasgow, Pillsbury Winthrop Treasurer John Hurley, Consultant Steven Kadner, Canberra Aquila Inc. Alec E. Kelley, Professor Emeritus Secretary John Mathieson, NDA, UK Hiroshi Kuribayashi, Consultant, Japan James G. McCray, Professor Emeritus, U of A WMS General Counsel Takao Nakajima, JAIF & Kurihalant Co., Ltd., Japan James Glasgow, Pillsbury Winthrop

4 WM2011 Program Advisory Committee (PAC)

PAC Chair/Deputy Managing Director Judy Connell, Fluor Gov. Group Lance Mezga, ORNL Gary Benda, Bartlett Services, Inc. Michael Connolly, Battelle Energy Keith Miller*, NNL Deputy PAC Chair Alliance Sue Mitchell, GEM Technologies Linda Lehman, CH2M HILL PRC Ramesh Dayal*, Consultant Sitakanta Mohanty, Center for J. Rick Dearholt, Sullivan International Nuclear Waste Reg. Analysis Track Co-Chairs & Track Number Group, Inc. Mike Nolan, Dade Moeller & Associates Kim Auclair, KD Auclair & Assoc. - 9 Rick Demmer, INL Michael Ojovan*, University of Sheffield Harry Babad, Consultant - 2 Murthy Devarakonda, Washington Gérald Ouzounian*, ANDRA Gabriele Bandt*, TÜV NORD EnSys TRU Solutions, LLC Larry Oyen, Larry Oyen Consulting Hannover - 3 George Dials, B&W Technical Svcs Corhyn Parr*, Nuclear Enterprise Ltd Tom Brouns, PNNL - 2 Paul Dickman, ANL Bernard Poncet*, EDF-CIDEN Connie Callan, National Educational David Eaton, CH2M-WG Idaho Kenneth Redus, Redus and Assoc. Technology Solutions - 8 Robert Edmonds, AREVA Larry Regens, University of Oklahoma John Coffman, DeNuke Services - 3 Mike Eisenhower, Materials & Energy Michelle Rehmann, HER Creative John Dalton*, UK NDA - 8 Corporation Solutions, LLC Jas Devgun, Sargent & Lundy - 6 Leif Eriksson, Consultant John Remark, AREVA Erich Evered, Mission Support Jim Fiore, Consultant Allen Roos, USACE Alliance – 7 Mark Frei, Longenecker & Associates Andreas Roth*, Westinghouse Electric Terry Fellinger, SRNL - 2 James Gallagher, Gallagher Consulting Company Albert Freitag, Mitsubishi Nuclear Kurt Gerdes, US DOE Nancy Rothermich, LBNL Energy Systems - 6 April Gil, US DOE Sylvain Saint-Pierre*, WNA W.T. (Sonny) Goldston, SRNS - 8 Donald Goebel, SEC Elizabeth Saris, SAIC Lawrence Harmon, Project Sal Golub, US DOE Detlef Schmidt*, NuProCo Enhancement Corporation - 5 Ron Gorham*, UK NDA Holger Spann*, E.ON Kernkraft GmBH Angie Jones, AMEC Earth and Anja Graf*, WAK GmbH Sergey Stefanovsky*, SIA Radon Institute Environmental - 7 Rob Grebb, HER Creative Solutions, LLC Hans-Jurgen Steinmetz*, Mark Lewis, EnergySolutions - 4 John Greeves, Talisman LLC Forschungszentrum Julich GmbH John Mathieson*, UK NDA - 1 William Gregory, Vinculum Roger Stigers, PPL Susquehanna Mark Matthews, Matthews, Inc - 1 Kenneth Guay, US DOE Robin Sweeney, US DOE C. Clint Miller, PG & E - 4 Harry Harmon, Senior Consultant Andrew Szilagyi, US DOE Roger Nelson, US DOE - 2 Kathryn Haynes, Southeast Joseph Tarantino, US Enrichment Olaf Oldiges*, WAK-Betriebs - 5 Compact Commission Corporation Colleen Owens, DeNuke Services - 3 Bob Hiergesell, SRNL Eric Tiepel, Golder Associates Fred Sheil*, Sheil Consulting Ltd. - 6 Guenter Hillebrand*, Nuclear Christopher Timm, Pecos Mgmt Services Wolfgang Steinwarz*, Engineering Seibersdorf GmbH Julia Tripp, INL Siempelkamp - 4 Steven Houser, Oneida Total Integrated Linda Ulland, University of Minnesota Donald Wood, GaeaTech Services - 1 Enterprises, LLC Leo van Velzen*, NRG Arnhem Richard Yoshimura, SNL – 5 Betty Humphrey, Weston Solutions Rik Vanbrabant*, Belgoprocess James Hylko, EC Government Services George Vandegrift, ANL Additional PAC Members Moses Jaraysi, CH2M HILL PRC Tjalle (Chuck) Vandergraaf*, Sue Aggarwal, New Millennium Leslie Jardine, LJ Jardine Services Providence College Nuclear Technologies Paul Jones, DeNuke Services Bernard Vigreux*, SFEN Ed Alperin, Consultant Dan Jordan, Enercon Services, Inc. James Voss, The Terra Verde Group Del Baird, CDM Federal Programs Wang Ju*, Beijing Research Institute of Charles Waggoner, Mississippi State Anthony Banford,* NNL Uranium Geology David Wallace, CDM Linda Beach, Waste Control Specialists Heather Klebba, Nuclear Filter Technology Wendell Weart, WD Weart Consulting Ed Bentz, E. J. Bentz & Associates Stan Kosiewicz, Weston Solutions Terry Wickland, Nuclear Filter Tech. Remi Bera, AREVA John Kristofzski, CH2M HILL Bob Williams, WTA, Inc. Robert Berry*, Foxfire Scientific Heinz Kröger*, TÜV NORD EnSys James Wright, Rio Technical Services Ned Bibler, Consultant Hannover Chuan-Fu Wu, US DOE Jennifer Biedscheid, Washington Christian Ladirat*, CEA Ming Zhang*, AIST TRU Solutions Leonel Lagos, Florida Intl University Dale Bignell, WA Closure Hanford Kun-Jai Lee*, KUSTAR (Korea) * = International PAC Members Enrique Biurrun*, DBE Tech. Gmbh Martin Letourneau, US DOE Dick Blauvelt, Portage Inc. Maria Lindberg*, Studsvik Nuclear AB International Program Advisory Elizabeth Bowers, US DOE- Richland Louis Londe*, ANDRA Committee (IPAC) Leaders Frazier Bronson, Canberra John Longenecker, Longenecker & Steve Brown, SHB Inc. Associates Canada Tjalle Vandergraaf Lisa Burns, Wastren Advantage Con Lyras*, Australian Nuclear Science France Bernard Vigreux Larry Camper, US NRC Organization Germany Wolfgang Steinwarz Chris Chadwick*, Porvair Filtration Paul Macbeth, US DOE Japan Ming Zhang Grant Charters, New Millennium Margaret MacDonell, ANL Korea Kun Lee Nuclear Technologies Jay Maisler, Enercon Services Scandinavia Leif Eriksson Donald Clark, DEC Enterprises Jack McElroy, Consultant Russia Les Jardine Ray Clark, US EPA Ella McNeil, US DOE United Kingdom Keith Miller Hans Codee*, CORVA N.V. Irena Mele*, IAEA

5 CONFERENCE REGISTRATION

Onsite Registration Fees

Conference Registration Full Technical includes Thursday US NRC / US DOE Workshop & Reception $1,175 PAC Members – Full Technical $1,175 2 Day Tech – Mon/Tues or Tues/Wed $1,015 1 Day Tech – Mon, Tues or Wed/Thurs $825 Full-Time Student – Full Technical $35 Exhibit Hall Only Registration Exhibit Hall Only $715 1 Day Only Exhibit Hall Pass – Mon, Tues or Wed $300 US NRC/US DOE Performance Assessment Workshop Full Technical Registration Included Other Conference Registrants $150 Workshop & Social Event Only $225 Guest Program and Add-on Tickets Guest Program Registration $110 Lunch Ticket – Mon or Tues $40 each Lunch Ticket – Mon & Tues Save $10 $70 Reception – Sunday, Monday or Tuesday $30 each Rustler’s Rooste Event $85

Registration Categories

Full Technical Registration – includes four days of Full Week Exhibit Hall Only Registration - the conference, receptions, the Monday Keynote includes access to Exhibit Hall only, including Lunch, Tuesday Awards Lunch, Wednesday Exhibit refreshment breaks and receptions on Sunday, Hall lunch, Thursday afternoon workshop, and the Monday and Tuesday evenings. Access only to conference proceedings as well as the Wednesday technical sessions as specially noted in program evening event. schedule.

Two Day Technical Registration – includes two One Day Only Exhibit Hall – If registering for this consecutive days of the conference, receptions, category, you will receive access to the Exhibit Hall lunches and proceedings. You may register for either for that day including the refreshment breaks and Monday and Tuesday or Tuesday and Wednesday. If evening reception. Drink tickets are not included. registering for Monday and Tuesday, the Sunday night Welcome Reception is also included. If Guest Registration - includes Exhibit Hall access to registering for Tuesday and Wednesday, the the social events on Sunday, Monday and Tuesday Wednesday evening event and the Thursday morning evenings and Continental Breakfast Monday though sessions are included. Thursday at the Hyatt Regency Phoenix hotel.

One Day Technical Registration – includes one Guests are defined as spouses and significant others day of the conference, reception, lunch and and are NOT BUSINESS ASSOCIATES! Co-workers proceedings. If registering for Wednesday, the in the industry do not apply. Please note no one Wednesday evening event and the Thursday morning under the age of 18 years old is permitted to attend sessions are included. the conference or Exhibit Hall.

Student Registration – see Full Technical Exhibitors: Conference registration fees are in Registration description. This category is open only addition to exhibitor booth fees, and exhibitors must to full-time students, 35 years of age or younger. pay for booths and registration separately. Some booth fees include registration badges, please see Speakers/Panelists – please note that all your contract. attendees of the WM2011 conference, including speakers and panelists, must register for the Any questions on your booth badges, please see conference in one of the listed categories. Melanie Ravalin at the Exhibitor Manager’s desk in the Exhibit Hall, near the back corner of Hall One.

6 Registration Policies Holiday Inn Express Hotel Phoenix Downtown P: +1 602-452-2020 Purchase Orders or Training Requisition forms DO 620 North Sixth Street, Phoenix, AZ 85004 NOT CONSTITUTE PAYMENT. Checks are to be made payable to: WM Symposia or WM2011 Radisson Hotel Phoenix Airport North Conference. P: +1 602-220-4400 427 North 44th Street, Phoenix, AZ 85008 Conference registration fees must be paid for prior to the conference. Pre-registrations not paid by the Car Rental Options Early Bird discount date of December 31, 2010 were updated to reflect the pricing when paid. WMS Avis - www.avis.com Discount Code: A198399 reserves the right to cancel your registration and Enterprise - www.enterprise.com #L508512 WMS hotel request if not paid by February 19, 2011. Hertz www.hertz.com Mtg CV Code: 019D0012

Credit cards accepted: Visa, MasterCard, and American Express. All payments must be made in US Phoenix Sky Harbor Airport Dollars. Bank transfers are not accepted. Sky Harbor is conveniently located just three miles Substitutions & Cancellations east of downtown Phoenix. The airport has three The deadline for substitution requests or terminals – Terminal 2, Terminal 3 and Terminal 4 – cancellation for the WM2011 Conference was each with its own parking garage, shops, restaurants February 18, 2011. Refunds will not be granted and ground transportation. Ground transportation after that date; nor will they be given to no-shows includes light rail, shuttles, taxis and car rentals. after the conference. Sky Harbor’s easily accessible Rental Car Center houses all of the airports rental car company Ribbons counters and fleets. A multi-colored “Rental Car Shuttle” provides free transportation from the airport Please stop by the Registration Desk to collect your curb at the baggage claim level to the Rental Car registration ribbons which include Presenter, Session Center, just west of Sky Harbor. Co-Chair, PAC Member, countries and more. You may also pick up stickers that list the years you’ve The airport also has a shuttle to the METRO light rail attended the WMS conference. station at 44th and Washington Streets using the PHX Airport Shuttle. From the 44th Street/Washington Special Needs METRO station, passengers can cross Washington Street heading south and board the free airport WMS Staff will be glad to help with any special needs shuttle bus. The airport shuttle buses travel to all (i.e., physical, dietary restrictions) as best we can terminals and parallels METRO’s service schedule. onsite. Please ask for Jennifer Seffrood or Melanie Ravalin at the Registration Desk for assistance. Phoenix-Mesa Gateway Airport

Hotel Accommodations The Phoenix-Mesa Gateway Airport, a smaller airport with only one terminal, is located about 30 miles from downtown Phoenix. It is the home of Allegiant For hotel assistance onsite, visit Sherry Roberts- Airlines. The terminal features three rental car Chavez at the Aquila Travel Desk in the Registration companies, a gift shop and free WiFi Internet. For area, Lower Level of the PCC during registration desk more information call 1-480-988-7600. hours. You may also reach her by phone at 800-595- 6257 or email at [email protected]. METRO Light Rail Service Hyatt Regency Phoenix P: +1 602-252-1234 www.valleymetro.org 122 North Second Street, Phoenix, AZ 85004 The METRO light rail system features state-of-the art Wyndham Phoenix P: +1 602-333-0000 vehicles that include oversized air conditioning units, 50 East Adams Street, Phoenix, AZ 85004 tinted windows, and door entries level with station platforms for easy, no-step boarding. Each vehicle Sheraton Phoenix Downtown P: +1 602-262-2500 has interior and exterior security cameras, 340 North Third Street, Phoenix, AZ 85004 emergency intercom systems, audible station announcements, and lighted message boards. Hilton Suites Phoenix P: +1 602-222-1111 10 East Thomas Road, Phoenix, AZ 85012

7 METRO light rail and Valley Metro bus share the same Should you be interested, a list of local restaurants is fare system. An all-day pass for $3.50 is good on available at the Registration desk. The PCC also has a both local bus and light rail. food court featuring Crust, City Central Coffee and others in the North Building. Metro stations near the PCC: Van Buren and Central Avenues; Washington and Central Avenues; Refreshment Breaks and 3rd Street and Jefferson. Metro station near the Hilton Suites: Thomas and Central Avenues. Refreshment breaks will be served Monday through Metro station near the Radisson Phoenix Airport th Wednesday in the Exhibit Hall, Lower Level of the North: 44 Street and Washington. PCC in the morning and afternoon. Coffee service only will be served Monday through Thursday near SuperShuttle Shared-Ride Van the Meeting Rooms, on the First Level of the PCC in Service To/From Sky Harbor Airport the morning and afternoon.

Thank you to MHF Services, Project Time & Cost, Advanced reservations are required for WM2011 SEC, Spectra Tech and Tetra Tech for sponsoring discounted rates through www.supershuttle.com. the Refreshment Breaks. Enter online discount code: 2NXXQ.

$12 per person/one way when booked online. All Conference Proceedings major credit cards and cash are accepted; pay online or directly to the SuperShuttle driver. Personal The conference proceedings are included with checks are NOT accepted on board. technical registration. Following the conclusion of the conference, approximately June 2011, attendees will Advance reservations are required for your return to be mailed a CD-ROM of the conference proceedings the airport. SuperShuttle Shared-Ride Van Service to the address listed on their registration materials. or Exclusive Van Service: Call +1 602-244-9000 at least 24 hours in advance of your departure time. Conference Evaluations Reservation agent will suggest pick up time from your hotel. We value and appreciate your comments and suggestions. You will receive a conference evaluation Taxis via email following the conference. All completed evaluations will be entered into a drawing to receive Apache Taxi +1 480-557-7000 a $500 certificate of savings towards the WM2012 AAA/Yellow Cab +1 480-888-8888 Conference. Mayflower Cab +1 602-955-1355 First Aid Lunches If first aid assistance is needed, please notify any Monday and Tuesday lunches are ticketed events WMS, PCC Security or hotel staff member. with programs and Wednesday lunch will be a casual lunch in the Exhibit Hall. These lunches are included Each meeting room at the PCC has a Security Monitor with a full technical or individual day registration fee. System that is a direct link to the Security department for emergencies as well as non- Meal tickets are required for the lunches. Please emergency help. remember to bring your ticket for entrance to the lunch. If you have previously requested a special The PCC is also equipped with Automated External meal such as Vegetarian, you will receive an Defibrillators (AED) throughout the building. An AED additional meal ticket to give to your server. Food is a device about the size of a laptop computer that orders cannot be changed as meal counts are analyzes the heart’s rhythm for any abnormalities guaranteed in advance. Please remember meal and, if necessary, directs the rescuer to deliver an tickets are non-refundable. Meals are not electrical shock to the victim. This shock, called guaranteed to anyone arriving more than 20 minutes defibrillation, may help the heart to reestablish an late to meal functions. Monday’s lunch is sponsored effective rhythm of its own. by North Wind, Inc. Cyber Cafés During the Wednesday lunch in the Exhibit Hall, winners of Exhibitors’ booth drawings will be Cyber Cafés will be located in the Lower Level of the announced. Be sure to attend as some of these PCC in the Exhibit Hall as well as on Level One near drawings require attendance to win. This event is the meeting rooms. Attendees will be able to access sponsored by EnergX. the Internet and print. Presenters may use the

8 computers to upload their presentations without Speaker and Co-Chair Check-In assistance online through www.wmsym.org. The Cyber Cafés are sponsored by AREVA. WMS asks that all Presenters (oral, panelist and poster) and Session Co-Chairs check-in during Lost and Found Registration on the Lower Level of the PCC to confirm their attendance and to receive any session updates. Please visit the Registration Desk for any lost and Registration is open beginning Saturday, February 26 found items during the conference at the PCC. at 8:00 am. After Sunday, for Check-in and for presenter changes or other questions on your Smoke Free Arizona Act session, the Speaker Support Room is available and located on Level One of the PCC. The Phoenix Convention Center is a smoke-free facility complying with the Smoke-Free Arizona Act. The Smoke-Free Arizona Act restricts smoking in public places and workplaces including but not limited to bars, restaurants, stadiums, reception areas, theatres and designated non-smoking hotel rooms. Should you wish to smoke, please look for the designated smoking areas outside of the building.

Translation Services

Should you need translation assistance during the conference, please ask for Jennifer Seffrood or Melanie Ravalin at the Registration Desk for assistance. WMS PAC Members who are multi-lingual have volunteered to assist others as needed. Please Speaker and Co-Chair Breakfast note that all WM2011 sessions are presented in English. All Presenters and Session Co-Chairs are required to attend the Speaker and Co-Chair Breakfast on the Twitter and Facebook Updates day of their session. Each session will have an assigned table so all Session Co-chairs can discuss WM2011 will be online with updates throughout the and organize their sessions. The breakfast will be conference. On Facebook, you can find the held at 7:00 AM on the Third Level of the PCC on conference at WM Symposia. And if you tweet, Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday and Level One on please post to our hash tag of #wmsym2011 so we Thursday. It is optional for Poster Presenters. can see all your Twitter comments. Speakers who have not checked in at the “INSIGHT”, Conference Newsletter Registration desk before the breakfast or at the Breakfast will have their presentation shown as Insight, the WM Symposia daily conference canceled at the session room entrance or poster newsletter, reports on technical topics addressed space. Monday’s Speaker’s Breakfast is sponsored during the sessions, exhibitor and sponsor by Honeywell. information, industry and important daily conference news and announcements. PowerPoint & Video Technical Support

The first issue, Sunday/Monday, will be provided in Presenters who require assistance to finish their the attendee registration bags. Be sure to pick up presentations may schedule a 15 minute one-on-one your Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday copies at technical support appointment from the audio-visual the Registration Desk, Exhibit Hall or near the staff in the Speaker Support Room located on Level meeting rooms on the first level of the PCC. One of the PCC. This service is only provided if staff time is available. Should additional time be Editors: Linda Ulland, University of Minnesota and requested, a fee may be charged. Linda Lehman, CH2M HILL PRC. Presenters who have video within their presentation Contributing Editors: Mike Berriochoa, Washington are asked to schedule a 15 minute one-on-one River Protection Solutions; Todd Nelson, technical support appointment from the audio-visual Washington Closure Hanford; Kimberly Tebrugge staff in the Speaker Support Room located on Level and Sonya Johnson, CH2M HILL PRC. One of the PCC to ensure their video files will work properly. There is no charge for this assistance.

9 Conference Support Service Center EXHIBITORS: These sessions are open to all attendees including Exhibitors who may attend at no The UPS Store located in the PCC will provide copy additional cost. services and is staffed Monday–Friday from 7:00 AM - 6:00 PM and Saturday from 8:00 AM - 2:00 PM, Panel Session 42 Phone: +1 602-251-0135. Contract Management Issues Related to Insurance, Indemnity, and Bonds A/V Presentation Support Tuesday - 3:15 PM - 5:00 PM This new panel will focus on the waste management WMS encourages presenters to upload their industry with key panel experts discussing these PowerPoint before the conference. To better provide issues. Both small and large business should attend assistant to last minutes changes to PowerPoint this new featured session. presentations, we have provided a schedule for A/V assistance. Presenters should identify when Panel Session 56 assistance is available for their session. Memory US DOE Procurement and Contracting sticks and CDs with PowerPoint’s may also be Opportunities dropped off for uploading. Wednesday - 8:30 AM - 10:10 AM

The audio-visual support staff will be available to This panel will focus on US DOE procurement and assist presenters with uploading their presentations contracting opportunities. Proposed Panelists include as listed below: senior officials from US DOE Office of Procurement and Assistance Management; EM Office of Acquisition Date Time Presenters and Contract Management; the NNSA Small Business Sun. Feb. 27 3 – 7 PM Sessions 1 -55 Program and the SRO Office of Contracts Mon. Feb. 28 11 AM – 1 PM Sessions 27- 55 Management. 2 – 5 PM Sessions 40- 70 Tues. March 1 9 AM – 1 PM Sessions 56 - 86 Panel Session 57 2 – 5 PM Sessions 71 - 101 Wed. March 2 9 AM – 1 PM Sessions 87 - 101 US DOE Contractor's Procurement and Contracting Opportunities Wednesday PowerPoint Presentations 10:15 AM - 12:00 PM

Presenters who have completed their PowerPoint This panel session will focus on Procurement and presentations will be able to upload their Contracting Opportunities with the US DOE’s Prime presentation without assistance online through Contractors. DOE encourages its’ prime contractors www.wmsym.org. Presenters may choose to upload to obtain goods and services from small and the presentations through their own Internet disadvantaged businesses. connection such as in their guest room. Award fee is based partially on the contractor’s success in achieving specific goals for subcontracts All presentations must be uploaded by 12 pm with small and disadvantaged businesses. the day prior to the session to ensure it is available for Co-Chair confirmation and at your Proposed Panelists will include Contracting Officers session. from the major DOE Contractors.

Presenters who have not uploaded their presentation Panel Session 72 by this deadline will have their presentation shown as Developments and Lessons Learned in the canceled at the session room entrance, unless prior American Recovery and Reinvestment arrangements have been made with WMS staff and Act (ARRA) received an email confirmation. Wednesday 1:30 PM - 3:10 PM Contracting and Opportunities Sessions This panel will focus on the lessons learned while integrating additional ARRA work scope to advance contaminated site cleanup efforts. The panel will also For WM2011, four business and contracting sessions highlight the ending of the ARRA and the policy will discuss upcoming opportunities and implications for future DOE-EM programs. Panel 73 administrative issues in the waste management has been merged into Panel 72. industry.

10 SPECIAL MEETINGS, TRAINING AND EVENTS

Saturday, February 26, 2011 WM2011 Plenary Session 8:00 AM – 10:00 AM 301C Program Advisory Committee (PAC) Meeting 5:00 PM – 9:30 PM WM2011 will begin with a Plenary Session that will feature world leaders speaking on the pressing issues This pre-conference meeting will be held at the Hyatt being faced by Waste Management in 2011 and Regency Phoenix. A separate invitation was sent to beyond. all PAC members and their guests on the event details. Proposed panelists include Dr. Inés R. Triay, US DOE, Assistant Secretary for Environmental Management; François-Michel Gonnot, Chairman Sunday, February 27, 2011 of the Governing Board of ANDRA and Thomas H. Zarges, URS Corporation, President - Energy & Hazard Assessment and Mitigation Training Construction. Workshop (will not be presented) A Continental Breakfast will be served before the First Time Attendee Session program begins on the Third Level of the PCC. 3:00 PM – 4:00 PM 106B

WMS is a non-profit organization dedicated to education and opportunity in waste management. It was founded to provide a forum for discussing and seeking cost-effective and environmentally responsible solutions to the safe management and disposition of radioactive waste and radioactive Dr. Inés R. Triay materials. Join us for this open session to learn more Assistant Secretary about the WM Symposia and the conference. US DOE Environmental Management Student Assistant Training Session 4:00 PM – 4:45 PM 106C Dr. Triay was appointed by President Obama as the Calling all Student Assistants! Be sure to attend this 7th DOE Assistant Secretary for Environmental mandatory training session. We’ll cover the basics of Management and sworn into office in May 2009. your job duties as a Session Assistant including the important details such as how to fill out your Dr. Triay has dedicated her career to the safe, timely, timecard and submit for payment. There will also be and cost-effective cleanup of radioactive waste and time to meet other students to kick off your WM2011 facilities from our nation Cold War nuclear weapons conference experience. production and research activities. She leads the largest, most diverse, and technically complex WM2011 Conference Welcome Reception environmental cleanup program in the world: 5:00 PM – 8:00 PM Lower Level Exhibit Hall • Annual budget of more than $5.5 billion Come meet new and old friends while browsing the • Workforce of more 30,000 federal and contractor WM2011 exhibits. The Registration Desk is open employees from 1:00 PM on, so stop by and pick up your badge • Enough radioactive waste to completely fill the anytime before the reception starts in the Exhibit Hall Louisiana Superdome on the Lower Level of the PCC. Light hors d’oeuvres • Originally involved more than 2 million acres at 107 and refreshments will be served. This event is sites located in 35 states sponsored by FLUOR. Prior to her appointment, she served as the cleanup Monday, February 28, 2011 program’s Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary, Chief Operations Officer, and Deputy Chief Operations ASME Radwaste Systems Committee Meeting Officer. During her tenure in these positions, the 7:30 AM – 11:00 AM Hyatt Regency Phoenix program completed the cleanup of the Department of Energy’s Rocky Flats site in Colorado and the Fernald The annual meeting of the ASME Radwaste System site in Ohio. She also played an instrumental role in Committee will be held on Monday morning, the commencement of remote-handled transuranic beginning with a Continental Breakfast. waste disposal operations at the Department of Energy’s Waste Isolation Plant in New Mexico.

11 WM2011 Keynote Luncheon featuring Dr. Richard A. Meserve 12:00 PM – 1:15 PM 301C

The Monday Keynote Luncheon ticket is included with the purchase of a full technical registration. This François-Michel Gonnot event is sponsored by North Wind. Chairman Governing Board of ANDRA

Dr. Richard A. Meserve President A member of Parliament for the Oise Department, Carnegie Institution Mr. Gonnot is member of the Economic Affairs Commission of the French National Assembly, Member of the US rapporteur of the draft law on energy markets and President’s Blue Ribbon rapporteur for advice of the budget for land and river Commission on America’s equipment and transport. Nuclear Future He was appointed the Chairman of the Governing Board of Andra in May 2005. He played a major role during the National Public Debate organized in Dr. Meserve became the ninth President of the 2005 and for the new Planning Act of 28 June 2006 Carnegie Institution in April 2003, after stepping concerning the sustainable management of down as Chairman of the US Nuclear Regulatory radioactive materials and waste. Commission (NRC). Meserve had been a member of Carnegie's Board of Trustees since 1992. After having passed the Planning Act, he focused his work at the local level. As Chairman of the Governing As Chairman of the NRC, Dr. Meserve served as the Board and due to his elected position, he is involved principal executive officer of the federal agency with in exchanges with local communities of existing responsibility for ensuring the public health and disposal facilities. He is also involved with the siting safety in the operation of nuclear power plants and in new facilities, including the geological repository for the usage of nuclear materials. He served as high and intermediate level long-lived wastes. Chairman under both Presidents Clinton and Bush and led the NRC in responding to the terrorism threat that came to the forefront after the 9/11 attacks.

Meserve has served on numerous legal and scientific committees over the years, including many established by the National Academies of Sciences and Engineering. He also currently serves as Chairman of the International Nuclear Safety Group, Thomas H. Zarges which is chartered by the International Atomic President, Energy & Energy Agency. Construction URS Corporation International Welcome Reception 5:00 PM – 6:00 PM Lower Level Exhibit Hall Tom Zarges is President of URS Corporation Energy & Construction business, with overall responsibility for Please join us for the International Welcome operations worldwide. Reception in the Exhibit Hall. We are appreciative of our international delegates for their participation With 41 years of experience in the global engineering and contributions that make WM2011 a truly and construction industry, Mr. Zarges has worked in worldwide event. You are encouraged to attend this heavy civil construction, on high-technology projects year’s reception, recognizing our 600+ non-US in the steel and process industries, in industrial attendees. Traveling to Phoenix from over 40 manufacturing, and on major nuclear and fossil- countries, these attendees represent many ongoing power projects. and emerging markets. In keeping with WMS’ mission of education and opportunity, participation of a number of these global delegates is sponsored by the IAEA and WMS. Light hors d’oeuvres and refreshments will be served. This event is sponsored by URS.

12 Student and Young Professionals Networking throughout the evening and the room will be Reception 6:00 PM – 7:30 PM 106C arranged to encourage informal discussions. This event is sponsored by FLUOR. All students, young professionals and conference attendees looking to meet and mingle with the next Wednesday, March 2, 2011 generation are welcome at the Student and Young Professionals Networking Reception, just after Rustler’s Rooste Networking Event the close of the International Welcome Reception. 6:30 PM – 10:00 PM Here’s your chance to meet our young professional attendees and find out more about the next Yeehaw! Come on out and do a little Boot Scootin’ generation of WM professionals. This event is with us! Join us for an evening of networking, dinner sponsored by PNNL. and cowboys at Rustler’s Rooste. Included in a Full Technical Registration, includes transportation, two Tuesday, March 1, 2011 drink tickets and all the food and dancing you desire.

Honors & Awards Luncheon Bus pick up at Hyatt Regency Phoenix begins at 6 12:00 PM – 1:15 PM 301C PM, the event at 6:30 PM. This event is sponsored by Cabrera Services and WM Symposia. Join us at the Tuesday Honors & Awards Luncheon ticket to honor the best presentations from WM2010 Thursday, March 3, 2011 and see the award winners and scholarship recipients for 2011. Program Advisory Committee (PAC) Meeting and Luncheon 12:00 PM – 3:00 PM Best of Arizona Reception 5:00 PM – 6:00 PM Lower Level Exhibit Hall This conference wrap-up meeting and planning for WM2012 will be held at the PCC following the Experience the Southwest at the Best of Arizona conclusion of the technical program. Lunch will be Reception in the Exhibit Hall. We’ll highlight the provided. State of Arizona, serving hors d’oeuvres from around this great state and beverages including Margaritas. US NRC/US DOE LLW Performance Assessment, the Safety Case (PRISM) and Long Term Women of Waste Management Panel and Monitoring Workshop Reception 6:00 PM – 7:30 PM 105B 1:00 PM – 5:45 PM 102ABC

How will global megatrends affect your life and your This course is sponsored by WM Symposia as a career in the next decade? Megatrends are the great service to the nuclear community and is included in a forces in social development that will very likely Full Technical registration. See session description impact the future in the next 10-15 years. Many for more information. companies and organizations use megatrends in their strategic work within business areas such as US NRC/US DOE/WMS Networking Reception corporate strategy, market innovation, business 5:45 PM – 6:45 PM Level One Foyer development, product development, and human resources. All workshop participants are invited to relax and enjoy a drink while networking after the wrap-up of Come network and hear the views of three women the afternoon session. leaders in our industry as they share their perspectives on this timely and provocative topic. Join Yvette Colazzo (US DOE), Laurence Pernod Friday, March 4, 2011 (AREVA), and Corhyn Parr (Nuclear Enterprise, UK) as they share their perspectives on the global move DOE/NRC Public Meeting 8:30 AM – 5:30 PM to an era where gender roles are less rigid, as evidenced by more women moving into increasingly The US Department of Energy (US DOE) and the responsible corporate roles. US Nuclear Regulatory Commission (US NRC) will be holding an all day joint public meeting at the Hyatt Regency Phoenix Hotel (122 North Second The 30-minute Panel discussion on Megatrends Street, Phoenix, AZ 85004) to discuss plans for Matter… Their Effects from Women’s revisions or updates of their respective directives or Perspectives will be followed by 10 minutes of Q&A, regulatory framework for management of Low-Level and an hour networking/social session. Plan to stay Radioactive Waste (LLW). The all-day joint meeting and take advantage of interacting with the panelists will be organized in two sessions (one for each and networking in small groups. A variety of agency), followed by a joint “Panel Discussion” beverages and hors d’oeuvres will be available Session.

13 PERFORMANCE ASSESSMENT – SESSIONS, WORKSHOP AND PUBLIC MEETING

For WM2011, along with the performance assessment (Licensing Requirements for Land Disposal of technical sessions, we will hold a workshop and a Radioactive Waste), as discussed in the NRC SECY- separate public meeting will be held on Friday 10-0165. Session II will also include presentations by regarding this subject. an NRC key note speaker and NRC staff.

On Thursday afternoon, WMS will include a topical The joint workshop will conclude with a joint workshop on “US NRC/US DOE/IAEA LLW DOE/NRC Panel Discussion to respond and explain Performance Assessment, the Safety Case agencies’ positions, future plans, and specific views (PRISM) and Long Term Monitoring”. This regarding LLW management framework. The panel workshop (Session 101) will start at 1:00 PM on will also address public and stakeholder suggestions Thursday, March, 3, 2011. This workshop will focus and comments. on common approaches, methods, and tools used in performance assessment to demonstrate compliance The public and stakeholders, as well as WM2011 with dose/risk criteria for LLW disposal facilities. participants, are encouraged to take this opportunity Discussions will also include the international of participating in the DOE/NRC joint meeting and approach regarding use of the safety case concept for discussions. Admission to the joint meeting is free of LLW disposal facilities and IAEA activities pertaining charge. For further information, please contact: to the project on Practical Illustration and Marty Letourneau [email protected], use of the Safety Case Concept in the Management of or Mike Lee at: [email protected]. Near-Surface Disposal (PRISM). LLW long-term monitoring aspects will also be addressed. These sessions include: Poster Session 25E This course is sponsored by WM Symposia as a Influence of Environments on Deep Disposal service to the nuclear community and is included in Sites Monday - 1:30 PM - 5:00 PM the Full Technical registration. For other attendees, the registration fee will range between $150 and Session 32 $225 onsite. Please see the Registration desk for Models and Data - Supporting Performance of more details. Geological Disposal Systems Tuesday - 8:30 AM - 12:00 PM The workshop will be followed by a US NRC/US DOE/IAEA/WMS Networking Reception from Poster Session 39C 5:45 PM – 6:45 PM. This event is sponsored by URS. LLW/ILW Performance Assessment Tuesday - 8:30 AM - 12:00 PM All workshop participants are invited to relax and enjoy a drink while networking after the wrap-up of Session 41 the afternoon session. Models and Data-Supporting Performance Assessment of Geological Disposal Systems The US Department of Energy (DOE) and the Tuesday - 1:30 PM – 3:15 PM US Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) will be holding an all day (8:30 a.m. – 5:30 p.m.) Session 65 joint public meeting on March 4, 2011, at the Performance of Disposal Systems, Facilities, Hyatt Regency Phoenix Hotel (122 North Second and Sites for LLW, ILW, MW, NORM and Street, Phoenix, AZ 85004) to discuss plans for TENORM Wednesday - 8:30 AM - 12:00 PM revisions or updates of their respective directives or regulatory framework for management of Poster Session 70A Low-Level Radioactive Waste (LLW). The all-day Crosscutting WM Policies, Programs and joint meeting will be organized in two Sessions Technologies Wednesday - 8:30 AM - 12:00 PM (one for each agency), followed by a joint “Panel Discussion” Session Session 75 Impacts of Updates to DOE's Radioactive Waste Session I will address DOE Order 435.1 (Radioactive Mgmt Order Wednesday - 3:15 PM - 5:00 PM Waste Management), and includes presentations by a DOE key note speaker and DOE staff. Session 90 It will also include a period for public and stakeholder Closure of HLW, SNF/UNF, and Long-lived feedback and comments. Session II will address the Alpha/TRU Facilities NRC’s proposal to initiate revision of 10 CFR Part 61 Thursday 8:30 AM - 12:00 PM

14 15 SCHOLARSHIPS, HONORS AND AWARDS

In keeping with the WMS’ mission of providing Best Oral Presentations - 2010 education and opportunity, the following awards and scholarships will be presented during the Tuesday At each conference, WMS recognizes the two best Honors and Awards Luncheon beginning at 12:00 PM. oral presentations/papers and poster/papers. Listed below are the selected winners from WM2010. This luncheon is included in a Full Technical and daily registration fees. Add-on tickets are available for “Just How Risky Is It? – Comparisons of the Exhibitors and Guests, please see the Registration Risks of Transporting Radioactive Waste” – Fees section. Presented by Earl Easton, Christopher Bajwa, US NRC (USA). Session 33, Abstract 10535. (Session Roy G. Post Foundation Sponsor: Ella McNeil). Scholarships “Results from Recent Science and Technology These scholarships are awarded in memory of Dr. Investigations Targeting Chromium in the 100- Roy G. Post. The Scholarships and the Foundation D Area, Hanford Site, Washington, USA” – carry on Dr. Post’s vision of education in this field Presented by John Morse, Michael Thompson, US and honor the Founder of the annual Waste DOE; Scott Petersen, CH2M HILL Plateau Management Conference. The Roy G. Post Remediation Company; Matthew Tonkin, S.S Foundation is a 501c3 tax-deductible Foundation Papadopulos & Associates, Inc. (USA). Session 65, dedicated to education in the safe management of Abstract 10287 (Session Sponsor: Linda Lehman). nuclear material. WMS/ASME Sarge Ozker Award The 2010 – 2011 scholarships will be presented to: Named in honor of M. Sacid (Sarge) Ozker and Yasir Arafat, University of Pittsburgh; established in 1980, this award is bestowed for distinguished service and eminent achievement in the Bryan W. Bittner, Texas State Technical College; commercialization of nuclear power/ energy with Lisa Dawn Cox, University of Wyoming; particular emphasis in the field of radioactive waste Denia Djokic, University of California – Berkeley; management. Sherry Faye, University of Nevada – Las Vegas; It is presented by the Nuclear Engineering Division - Kathryn Huff, University of Wisconsin – Madison; Radwaste Systems Operating Committee of the Peng Luo, Clemson University; American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME). William James Sames, Texas A&M University. The 2011 Sarge Ozker Award will be presented to Charles Jensen of Diversified Technologies Services, Best Poster Winners - 2010 Inc.

First Place – ANS Poster, Track 2. Program Advisory Committee “Control of Volatile Radionuclides from the Award Dissolution of Used Nuclear Fuel”- Abstract 10224. WMS has established the Program Advisory R.T. Judbin, D.W. Ramey, R.S. Owens, E.S. Meyers, Committee (PAC) Award to annually recognize an B.B. Spencer, P.D. Bailey and J.M. Giaquinto, Oak individual whose outstanding contributions have Ridge National Laboratory (USA). helped make and keep the annual Waste Management Conference the world’s premier Second Place – ASME Poster, Track 6. technical conference on the management and “Progress Achieved in the Decommissioning of disposal of nuclear waste. the Process Building of the Karlsrue Reprocessing Plant” - Abstract 10121. Werner Dander, Werner Lutz and Hubert Praxl, WAK GmbH (Germany). The 2011 WMS Program Advisory Committee Award will be presented to Fred Sheil Sheil Consulting, Ltd.

16 Wendell D. Weart Lifetime Sunday, February 27, 2011 Sonoran Desert Guided Hike Achievement Award 9:30 AM – 1:30 PM $50.00/pp

The WMS Wendell D. Weart Lifetime Achievement Located in the heart of the valley, the Piestewa Peak Award recognizes the long-term commitment of the Park has a number of hiking trails to choose from. recipient to solving major nuclear waste challenges, which may include education, research, public policy, For this morning’s hike, we have selected a four mile or implementation of solutions for managing nuclear Easy to Moderate Hike that winds its way through wastes and whose actions have contributed to the the desert and provides guests with views of the resolution of significant nuclear waste management valley in all directions. The overlooks along the trail issues. provide beautiful views of downtown Phoenix, the surrounding valley and various mountain ranges The WMS Wendell D. Wear Lifetime Achievement including South Mountain, Superstitions Wilderness, Award is sponsored by Sandia National Four Peaks, McDowell Mountains, The White Tanks Laboratories. and Estrella Mountains.

This excursion has facilities conveniently located at the trailhead, as well as picnic areas where we’ll enjoy a rewarding boxed lunch. Healthy snacks, bottled water and lunch will be provided along with The 2011 WMS Wendell D. the use of the backpacks, trekking poles, all entry Wear Lifetime Achievement and permit fees and a First Aid/CPR Certified Guide. Award will be presented to Charles McCombie, MCM Hikers will be required to sign a Waiver of Liability. Consulting. Comfortable athletic shoes or hiking shoes are required. No flip flops or loose fitting footwear is permitted. Guests are strongly urged to wear a hat, sunglasses and sunscreen.

GUEST TOURS AND ACTIVITIES

Saturday, February 26, 2011 Day Tour of Grand Canyon, Sedona and the Navajo Nation 7:00 AM – 8:00 PM $125.00/pp

The day begins with a scenic drive through the Sonoran Desert to Sedona. Here guests will have a chance to photograph the famous Red Rocks and stretch their legs. Next, we’ll pass through Oak Monday, February 28, 2011 Creek Canyon, a scenic byway that winds through 2,000 vertical feet of red walled canyons Desert Dish Garden Activity at the Desert Botanical to emerge in a Ponderosa Forest. Garden - cancelled due to lack of minimum registrants. While at the South Rim of the Grand Canyon National Park, guests will enjoy a three-hour guided tour and Day at the Spa an opportunity to walk the rim, shop, have lunch, or 9:30 AM – 4:00 PM $150.00/pp just relax with a view. We'll also explore a 30-mile section of road that winds along the rim of the Join us for a day at a Resort Spa for specialized canyon. treatments and lunch. Our shuttle van will transport you door to door leaving from the Hyatt Regency Returning to Phoenix from the canyon, we will enjoy Phoenix. Guests choose preferred spa selections, views of the Navajo Nation and Painted Desert, with such as a massage, facial, manicure/pedicure. Due a stop at an authentic Navajo Trading Post. Tour to the specialized nature of this activity, on-site includes lunch, national park entry fees and bottled reservations are not available. Tour package water. includes lunch and spa treatment.

17 Phoenix By Night Walking Tour – Wednesday, March 2, 2011 History, Haunts and Cultures Mosaic Jewelry Workshop and Lunch - cancelled due 7:00 PM – 10:00 pm $10.00/pp to lack of minimum registrants.

Join us to explore some of the diverse historical and Market Fresh “Mixology” Workshop at the Desert cultural aspects of downtown Phoenix. Starting from Botanical Garden - cancelled due to lack of minimum the Phoenix Convention Center, this walking tour will registrants. be lead by the Phoenix Ambassadors and will visit several historical sites including the Orpheum Important Tour Information Theater, St. Mary’s Cathedral and the Rosson House, all within one square mile of the PCC. Pre-registration for tours is recommended, you may register onsite if space is still available, there may be We will enjoy specialty complimentary appetizers an increase in price. All tours depart from the while listening to scary ghost stories at the haunted Monroe exit of the Hyatt Regency Phoenix. San Carlos Hotel and Ghost Bar and then visit the new CityScape area of Phoenix that blends urban Boarding time is 15 minutes prior to scheduled living, work, shopping and entertainment departure. Be sure to pack a jacket, hat, sunscreen opportunities. We will end the evening by and your camera. experiencing some of the traditional British and Irish cultures. The Guest Program is organized by WMS and provided by Detours of Arizona, Take a Hike Arizona We highly recommend wearing comfortable walking and other vendors. shoes for this tour.

Tuesday, March 1, 2011 Guest Program Activities Sedona & Native Ruins Jeep Tour 7:00 AM – 5:30 PM $150.00/pp Stop by to see old friends and meet new from around the world. We’ll have information available from the Phoenix Convention & Visitors Bureau daily to help Our Sedona tour options range from cultural and you plan your day. spiritual to adventurous and active! Along with shopping, art gallery visits and favorite photo spots The Guest Program includes a light continental to view and explore, guests will also enjoy a 2.5 hour breakfast at the Hyatt Regency Phoenix, Monday Ancient Ruins Pink Jeep tour. This off road tour through Thursday from 8:00 am – 10:00 am and the offers views of Sedona's backcountry and ancient evening receptions on Sunday, Monday and Tuesday ruin sites which date back over 800 years! in the Exhibit Hall for a registration fee of just $110 onsite. Enjoy scenic highlights such as Bell Rock, Cathedral Rock, Chapel of the Holy Cross, Oak Creek Canyon Please note that the Wednesday evening event or and Airport Mesa Overlook. You will love the wonders reception drinks are no longer included with this of this sculpted red rock playground. Tour includes registration fee. lunch and bottled water during tour. Downtown Phoenix Events Cooking Class with Chef Guerithault 10:00 AM – 1:00 PM $75.00/pp You will find the best weather and great events to add to your stay while in Phoenix for the WM2011 Vincent Guerithault, chef/owner of Vincent Conference. Guerithault on Camelback and the first chef ever to receive a Citation of Excellence from the International The Greater Phoenix Convention and Visitors Bureau Food & Wine Society, is considered by many to be has an office located at the PCC, just across from the Phoenix's culinary prize. For more than 20 years, Hyatt Regency Phoenix at 125 N. Second Street, Vincent has been combining his expertise in classic Suite 120, Phoenix. French cooking with Southwestern ingredients to create a unique blend of flavors that has become his The office hours are Monday – Friday from signature. His style is constantly evolving. 8 am – 5 pm. For more information, go to www.visitphoenix.com or call (877) Call-PHX. Our day will include preparing one of the courses for lunch at Vincent’s with the other two by demonstration. Chef Vincent will give individual instructions on creating these great menu items. Afterwards, guests will enjoy their lunch while Chef Vincent demonstrates the remaining menu items.

18 NETWORKING RECEPTION & DINNER AT RUSTLER’S ROOSTE ON WEDNESDAY, MARCH 2

Wednesday’s evening event is the time to meet the WM attendees in a casual outdoor setting under the stars.

After all the positive reviews last year, we are bringing back Rustler’s Rooste as our featured Wednesday event.

Buses will shuttle you from the Hyatt beginning at 6:00 PM and return you safely later that evening so you can relax and enjoy a taste of the old West.

You will be able to dance, gamble and enjoy the casual environment of one of the most visited sites in the Phoenix area.

The legend goes that the original site of Rustler’s Rooste, located at the top of a butte in the foothills of South Mountain, was a hideout for cattle rustlers.

Today, it is Arizona’s Legendary Cowboy Steakhouse featuring a spectacular panoramic view of the valley lights.

“Hey good lookin’, whatcha got cookin’?”

Get ready for a cowpoke cookout served Chuckwagon style with picnic seating. You’d better come hungry cause Cookie, the chuck wagon chef, doesn’t like light eaters. Sample some tasty appetizers (Yup! they’ve got rattlesnake) and when you hear the dinner bell, treat yourself to mesquite–broiled steaks, ribs and chicken served with all the fixin’s they are famous for.

Be sure to save room for desserts, like homemade apple pie or rich fudge brownies.

“Boot Scootin’ Boogie” and “Games of Chance”

Okay, we’ve tempted your taste buds and now it’s time to make cowboys out of some of you city slickers. They’ve got the best western entertainment, from a foot stompin’ band and line dancing inside to a little poker training and games of chance outside under the Arizona stars.

Professionals will help you learn and sharpen your gambling skills with free (and worthless) WM Bucks. There are no losers at WMS!

Now if you register as a Full Technical attendee for WM2011, the Rustler’s Rooste event will be included. If you are not a Full Technical attendee, we still encourage you to come! Tickets are $85 onsite. The event includes transportation, two drink tickets and all the food, gambling and dancing you desire . . . until 9:45 PM.

Buses will pick up at the Hyatt Regency Phoenix at 6:00 PM and the event will begin with cocktails at 6:30 PM.

Buses will return guests to the conference hotels beginning at 8:30 PM. The last bus will depart Rustler’s Rooste approximately 9:45 PM. Drivers may pick up directions at the Registration Desk.

For more information on Rustler’s Rooste, visit www.rustlersrooste.com.

19 20

22 23 24 WM2011 Approved Acronyms * Acronyms are US unless noted otherwise

ACRS Advisory Committee on Reactor HEPA High Efficiency Particulate Air Review Board Safety HEU Highly Enriched Uranium NWPA Nuclear Waste Policy Act of AEA Atomic Energy Agency or the HLW High Level Radioactive Waste 1982 Atomic Energy Act of 1954 IAEA* International Atomic Energy NWPAA Nuclear Waste Policy AECL* Atomic Energy of Canada Agency (Austria) Amendments Act of 1987 Limited ICRP International Commission on OECD* Organization for Economic AFR Away-From-Reactor Storage Radiological Protection Cooperation & Development (France) ALARA As Low As Reasonably IFSOUP International Forum on ORNL Oak Ridge National Laboratory Achievable Sustainable Options for Uranium PA Performance Assessment ANDRA* National Radioactive Waste Production PAC Program Advisory Committee Management Agency (France) ILW Intermediate Level Radioactive PCB Polychlorinated Biphenyl ANL Argonne National Laboratory Waste PCC Phoenix Convention Center ANS American Nuclear Society INL Idaho National Laboratory PNNL Pacific Northwest National ARM Accelerator-Produced IPAC International Program Advisory Laboratory Radioactive Material Committee PRA Probabilistic Risk Analysis ASME American Society of Mechanical IPSN* Institute de Protection et de PWR Pressurized Water Reactor Engineers Surete (France) QA Quality Assurance BNL Brookhaven National Laboratory JAEA* Japan Atomic Energy Agency QAPP Quality Assurance Program BWR Boiling Water Reactor (Japan) Plan CE&T Public Communication, KAERI* Korea Atomic Energy QC Quality Control Participation, Education & Training Research Institute (Korea) R&D Research and Development CEA* French Atomic Energy LAW Low-Activity Radioactive Waste RCRA Resource Conservation and Commission (France) LANL Los Alamos National Laboratory Recovery Act of 1976 CERCLA Comprehensive LBNL Lawrence Berkeley National RDD Radiological Dispersion Devices Environmental Response, Laboratory RH-TRU Remote-Handled Transuranic Compensation and Liability Act LEU Low Enriched Uranium Radioactive Waste CFR Code of Federal Regulations LL/ILW Low- and Intermediate-Level ROC* Republic of China CH-TRU Contact-Handled Transuranic Radioactive Waste RPV Reactor Pressure Vessel Radioactive Waste LLNL Lawrence Livermore National SFEN * French Nuclear Energy CPP Crosscutting Policies & Programs Laboratory Society (France) D&D Decontamination & LLRW/LLW Low Level Radioactive SKB* Swedish Nuclear Fuel and Decommissioning Waste Waste Management Company DAW Dry Activated Waste LSA Low Specific Radioactive Activity SNF Spent Nuclear Fuel DCS Dry Container Storage LWR Light-Water Reactor SNL Sandia National Laboratories DNFSB Defense Nuclear Facility M&I Management & Integration SNM Special Nuclear Material Safety Board M&O Management & Operation SRS Savannah River Site DOD US Department of Defense MRS Monitored Retrievable Storage SRW Solid Radioactive Waste DOE US Department of Energy MW Mixed Hazardous and Radioactive SS&S Security, Safety, & Safeguards DOT US Dept of Transportation Wastes TENORM Technologically-Enhanced DU Depleted Uranium NAGRA* National Cooperative for the Naturally Occurring Radioactive DWPF Defense Waste Processing Disposal of Radioactive Waste Material Facility (Switzerland) TRU Transuranic (elements with EC* European Commission NCRP National Council on Radiation atomic number > than 92) EDF* Electricite’ de France (France) Protection TRUPACT Transuranic Waste Package EIS Environmental Impact Statement NDA Non-Detectable Activity or Transporter EM Environmental Management Nuclear Decommissioning Authority TSCA Toxic Substances Control Act ENEA* National Agency for New (UK) UK United Kingdom Technologies, Energy and NDAA National Defense Authorization US/USA United States of America Environment (Italy) Act of 2005 US ACE US Army Corps of Engineers EPA US Environmental Protection NE US DOE Office of Nuclear Energy UNF Used Nuclear Fuel Agency NEA* Nuclear Energy Agency(France) WAC Waste Acceptance Criteria EPRI Electric Power Research NEI Nuclear Energy Institute WD Waste Determination Institute NEPA National Environmental Policy WERC Waste-management Education ER Environmental Remediation Act of 1969 & Research Consortium ES &H Environment, Safety & Health NFDI National Facility Disposition WIPP Waste Isolation Pilot Plant FUSRAP Formerly Utilized Sites Initiative WIR Waste Incidental to Remedial Action Program NNSA National Nuclear Security Reprocessing GAO US Government Accountability Administration WM Waste Management Office NORM Naturally Occurring WMS Waste Management Symposia GIS Geographical Information System Radioactive Material WRAP Waste Receiving and GNEP Global Nuclear Energy NPP Nuclear Power Plant Processing Partnership NRC US Nuclear Regulatory WS Wet Storage GTCC Greater Than Class C Low-Level Commission WVDP West Valley Demonstration Radioactive Waste NTS Nevada Test Site Project H&S Health and Safety NWTRB Nuclear Waste Technical YM Yucca Mountain

25

Technical Program - Schedule at a Glance - # Time Room Annotated Session Titles (for full session titles, please see individual listing) 1: Crosscutting 2: HLW/SNF/TRU NORM L/ILW, 3: 4: Nuclear Power Pl. 5: Packag./Trans. 6: D&D 7: Environ. Rem. 8: Commun., E & T 9: Safety/Security

Monday Morning, February 28 9 WM Subject Tracks for Reference 1 WM2011 Plenary Session 8:00 301 CD X 2 Panel: Hot Topics in US DOE Environmental Management 10:00 102 AB X 3 Panel: International Deep Geological Repository Progress 10:00 105 B X 4 Worldwide WM Regulatory/Oversight Crosscutting Update 10:00 104 AB X 5 Recent Changes among Mixed Waste & Haz. Was. Regs 10:00 101 C X 6 World-Wide Topics on Packaging Design and Testing 10:00 105 C X 7 Decommissioning – Programmatic Overview 10:00 103 AB X 8 HLW, SNF/UNF, TRU Programs, and Policies 10:00 106 A X 9 Communication of Technical Issues 10:00 106 B X 10 Innovative Applications in Info. and Knowledge Mgmt 10:00 106 C X 11 Advances in Nuclear Safety Management 10:00 101 B X Monday Afternoon, February 28 12 Panel: Sellafield - Accomplishments & Challenges 1:30 102 B X 13 Panel: Progress by the US National Blue Ribbon Com. 1:30 105 B X 14 Panel: US DOE Yucca Mountain Site and the Alternatives 3:15 105 B X 15 Panel: Hot Topics in US Commercial LLW 1:30 104 AB X X 16 Selected Key Topics in US Commercial LLW Management 3:15 104 AB X 17 Panel: Safety Management - Key to Effective Execution 1:30 103 AB X 18 Worldwide Perspectives of Radioactive WM 1:30 105 C X X 19 Storage and Retrieval of HLW - Part 1 1:30 106 A X 20 Management of Nuclear Power Plant Dry Waste 1:30 106 B X 21 Management of Nuclear Power Plant Liquid & Wet Waste 3:15 106 B X 22 D&D of US DOE Facilities 1:30 106 C X 23 Groundwater Remediation Projects 1:30 101 B X 24 Engaging Citizens - Lessons Learned Around the World 1:30 101 C X 25 Poster: HLW, SNF/UNF and Long-Lived Alpha/TRU 1:30 1st Floor X 26 Student Posters: The Next Generation 1:30 Exh. Hall X Tuesday Morning, March 1 27 Panel: Emerging Issues with US DOE Prime Contractors 8:30 102 B X 28 Panel: Worldwide Regulatory Oversight of Legacy Sites 8:30 105 B X X 29 The Role of the DOE in Reducing Risk 8:30 104 AB X 30 ER Progress Toward Closure of Contaminated Sites 8:30 105 C X 31 Technical Innovations in ER and Site Closure 8:30 106 A X 32 Models and Data - Geological Disposal Systems 8:30 106 B X X 33 Separation in Support of Current HLW Processing 8:30 106 C X 34 Regulatory Issues and Solutions for LLW, ILW and MW 8:30 101 B X 35 Packaging/Transportation – Challenges/Lessons Learned 8:30 101 C X 36 D&D of Nuclear Power Plants 8:30 102 A X X X 37 Panel: New Engineers - Wants and Needs 8:30 103 AB X X 38 Panel: International Youth Nuclear Congress/Young Prof. 10:15 103 AB X X 39 Posters: LLW, ILW, MW, TENORM and NORM; NPP 8:30 1st Floor X X Tuesday Afternoon, March 1 40 Panel: US Featured Site: DOE - Savannah River 1:30 102 B X 41 Models and Data - Geological Disposal Systems 1:30 103 AB X 42 Panel: Contract Mgmt Issues Ins., Indemnity & Bonds 3:15 103 AB X 43 Project Management - Planning through Completion 1:30 102 A X 44 Enhancements in Vitrification Technology 1:30 101 C X 45 Operational Efficiency in TRU Waste Management 1:30 101 B X 46 Panel: Nuclear Power Plant WM - LLW Disposal Issues 1:30 104 AB X 47 Panel: Nuclear Power Plant WM - LLW Processor Issues 3:15 104 AB X 48 Waste Certification, Acceptance & Disposal for LLW/ ILW 1:30 105 C X 49 Pollution Prevention/Waste Minimization for LLW/ILW 3:15 105 C X 50 Waste Charact. for LLW, ILW, MW - Non-Measurement 1:30 106 A X 51 Waste Charact. for ILW, LLW, HLW – Ionizing Radiation 3:15 106 A X 52 Accelerated Deactivation and Decommissioning of Fac. 1:30 105 B X 53 ER Pre-Closure Challenges - Considering Future Land Use 1:30 106 B X 54 Visitor Centers and Other Public-Education Tools 1:30 106 C X 55 Posters: ER, CE&T and Safety, Security and Safeguards 1:30 1st Floor X X X 26 3XXXX X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X 55 54 X 53 7XXXXX X X X X X X X XX X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X XXXX X X XXX X X X X X X X X X X X X X X XXX X X X XX X X 52 X X 51XX X X X 50 X X 49XXX X X 48 XX XX X 47 X X 46 X X X X 45 X X XXXX X XXXX 44XXXXX X X 43 X X X XX X 42 XXX X XX X 41 X X XXXX 40 X X XXXXXXX X XXX 39XXXXXX X XXX XXX 38XXXXX 37XXXXX X X 36XXXXX X X X 35 X XX X 34XX XXX X 33 X 32X X 31 X 30XX X XXX X X XXX 29 X X X XXX 28 X 27 XXX X X XXX 26XXX X XXXXXXXXXX 25XXXXXX X 24XXXXX X 23 X XXX 22 XXXX 21 XXX 20XXX XX 19XX XX 18XX X X 17 16 15 14XXX13XXX12XX X 11X X 10 XXXXXXXX XXXXXXXX XXXXX

X XX X X X X XX XX X XX XXXX XXX XX X XXXX XXX XXXXX X XXXX 9X 8XX XX 7XX X 6X 5XX X 4XX XXXXXXX 3XX 2 1XX Session #

Non-US Presentations

US Government Contractors

Industry/Med/Univ. Waste Generators

US-Nuclear Power Plants

Non-US Nuclear Power Plants

Business Admin & Monday Afternoon, February 28

Monday Morning, February28 Opportunities Tuesday Afternoon,Tuesday March1 Tuesday Morning, March1 Open to all Exhibitors

Health, Safety & Quality Assurance 27 Policies & Programs

Regulatory, Licens. & Oversight

Performance Assessment

TRU/Long-Lived Alpha

Radiation Measurement

Processing, Treatment & Tech.

Deep Geo. Storage or Disposal

Mixed (Haz. & Rad.) Materials

Underground Tank Closure Technical Program - Schedule at a Glance - # Time Room Annotated Session Titles (for full session titles, please see individual listing) 1: Crosscutting 2: HLW / SNF / TRU NORM L/ILW, 3: 4: Nuclear Power P. 5: Packag./Trans. 6: D&D 7: Environ. Rem. 8: Commun., E & T 9: Safety, S & Wednesday Morning, March 2 9 WM Subject Tracks for Reference 56 Panel: US DOE Procurement & Contracting Opportunities 8:30 105 B X 57 Panel: US DOE/USACE Small Bus Contracting Opportunity 10:15 105 B X 58 Crosscutting Filtration Systems in the Nuclear Industry 8:30 102 B X 59 Panel: US DOE - EFCOG Knowledge Portal Review 10:15 102 B X 60 Panel: Disposal of Large Quantities of Depleted Uranium 8:30 103 AB X 61 Panel: Disposition of US DOE High-Activity Mixed Waste 10:15 103 AB X 62 Training and Human Resource Development in WM 8:30 104 AB X 63 TRU Waste Disposal at WIPP 8:30 101 B X 64 Storage and Retrieval of HLW - Part 2 8:30 101 C X 65 Performance of LLW Disposal Systems, Facilities and Sites 8:30 102 A X 66 D&D of Nuclear Contaminated Facilities (Non-Power) 8:30 106 B X 67 US – FUSRAP and Other US Army Corp Projects 8:30 106 C X 68 Innovative Field Monitoring for Environmental Remediation 8:30 105 C X 69 RDD and other Nuclear Weapons of Mass Destruction 8:30 106 C X X 70 Poster: Crosscutting Policies, Packaging/Transport., D&D 8:30 1st Floor X X X Wednesday Afternoon, March 2 71 Panel: Featured Site West Valley Demonstration Project 1:30 102 B X 72 Panel: Developments and Lessons Learned in the ARRA 1:30 105 B X 73 Panel: Merged into Session 72 1:30 105 B X 74 Panel: Nuclear Renaissance - New Nuclear PP Hot Topics 1:30 104 AB X X X X 75 Panel: DOE's Radioactive Waste Management Order 3:15 104 AB X 76 Waste Reduction by Fuel Recycling: Analysis and Insight 1:30 106 A X 77 Alternative Technologies for Waste Stabilization 3:15 106 A X 78 Technologies and Advances in TRU Waste Processing 1:30 105 C X 79 International Approaches to Deep Disposal of HLW & SNF 3:15 105 C X 80 Operating Experience in the Treatment & Storage of LLW 1:30 106 B X 81 The Uranium Mining Industry - Current Topics and Issues 1:30 102 A X 82 Waste Characterization for LLW – Ionizing Measurement 3:15 102 A X 83 Packaging and Transportation Regulatory Issues 1:30 101 B X 84 Deep Vadose Zone Characterization and Remediation 1:30 101 C X 85 The Citizen Voice - Impacting the Nuclear Renaissance 1:30 103 AB X 86 Non-Paper Poster Session on Emerging Issues 1:30 1st Floor X Thursday Morning, March 3 87 Panel: Waste Management EFCOG Meeting 8:30 106 A X 88 Panel: ER Global Networking 10:35 105 A X 89 Advanced UF Recycling & Disposal Options 8:30 102 B X 90 Closure of HLW, SNF/UNF and TRU Facilities 8:30 101 C X 91 PM Improvements Through Risk Management Innovations 8:30 106 B X 92 Improved Flowsheets for Processing of TRU and HLW 10:15 106 B X 93 Glass Formulation and Melter Development 8:30 106 C X 94 Stabilization for Legacy Waste 10:15 106 C X 95 Waste Characterization for LLW– Non-Ionizing Radiation 8:30 103 A X 96 Transportation Impacts on State/Tribal/Local Jurisdictions 8:30 103 B X 97 Application of Innovative D&D Technologies 8:30 104 B X 98 ER Post Closure Challenges/Stewardship/Legacy Mgmt. 8:30 101 B X 99 Communication of Technical Issues 8:30 104 A X 100 Training, Education, Knowledge Mgmt.,Safety & Perform. 10:15 104 A X Thursday Afternoon, March 3 101 NRC/DOE/IAEA Performance Assessment Workshop 1:00 102 ABC X

Subject to change, please check signage onsite at the conference session room.

28 Session # Non-US Presentations US Government Contractors Industry/Med/Univ. Waste Generators US-Nuclear Power Plants Non-US Nuclear Power Plants Business Admin & Opportunities Open to all Exhibitors Health, Safety & Quality Assurance Policies & Programs Regulatory, Licens. & Oversight Performance Assessment TRU/Long-Lived Alpha Radiation Measurement Processing, Treatment & Tech. StorageDeep Geo. or Disposal Mixed (Haz. & Rad.) Materials Underground Tank Closure Wednesday Morning, March 2 56 X X X X 57 X X X X 58 X X X X X X X 59 X XXXX X XX 60XXX XXX 61X XXXXX 62 X X X X X X X X X 63 X X X X X X X 64 X X X X X X X 65XXX XXXX X X 66 X X X X X X X X X 67 X XXX XX 68 X X X X X X X X 69 X X X X X X X X X 70XXXXX XXXXX X XX Wednesday Afternoon, March 2 71 X XXX X X XX 72 X XXXXX 73 X XXXXX 74 X X X X X X 75 X XXXXX XXXX 76XX XX XXX 77 X X X X X X 78 X X X X X X 79 X X X X X 80X X XXXX X X 81 X X X X X 82 X X X X X X X 83 X X X 84 X X X X X 85 X X X X 86 X X X X X X X X Thursday Morning, March 3 87 X XXXXX X XX 88 X X X X X X X 89X XX XXXX XX 90 X XXXXXXX X 91 X X X X 92 X X X X X 93 X X X X X 94 X X X X X 95 X X X X 96 X XXX X 97 X X X X X X X X X 98 X X X X X 99 X X X 100 X X X Thursday Afternoon, March 3 101XXXXX XXXXX XXXX

Subject to change, please check signage onsite at the conference.

29 Monday AM

February 28, Monday AM Session 3 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM Room 105B Presenters and Session Volunteers are in Bold Panel: International Deep Geological Repository Session 1 Progress 8:00 AM - 9:45 AM Room 301C Co-Chairs: Enrique Biurrun, DBE TECHNOLOGY Panel: WM2011 Symposium Plenary GmbH (Germany); Gérald Ouzounian, ANDRA (France) Co-Chairs: James Gallagher, Gallagher Consulting; Lead Organizer: Leif Eriksson Fred Sheil, Sheil Consulting, Ltd. (United Kingdom) Add’l Organizer(s): Enrique Biurrun, Gérald Lead Organizer: James Gallagher Ouzounian Add’l Organizer(s): James Voss, Gary Benda Panel Reporter: John Mathieson Panel Reporter: Linda Ulland This panel will focus on a select set of advanced deep The opening Plenary Session will feature industry geological repository programs worldwide and leaders discussing the pressing issues facing provides a forum for interested parties to learn more Radioactive Waste Management in 2011 and beyond about these programs. Notwithstanding the first deep from around the world. geological repository for SNF and HLW in the USA was brought to a virtual standstill in 2009, several Panelists include: Dr. Inés Triay, Assistant other repository programs continue to make Secretary for Environmental Management - US DOE; considerable progress that deserve to be recognized François-Michel Gonnot, Chairman of the and used to advantage by interested parties. Governing Board of ANDRA (France's National Repository programs will report upon the current Radioactive WM Agency) and Tom Zarges, President status and future plans, as well as the perceived - Energy & Construction, URS Corporation. reasons underlying the success or the failure of components of their respective repository programs. Questions and answers will be entertained from the Session 2 audience. 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM Room 102AB Panelists include: Borries Raapke, Managing Panel: Hot Topics in US DOE Environmental Director of DBE and DBE TECHNOLOGY (Germany); Management François-Michel Gonnot, Chairman of ANDRA and member for the French Parliament (France); Dr. Inés Triay, Assistant Secretary for Environmental Co-Chairs: James Gallagher, Gallagher Consulting; Management, US DOE; Marjatta Palmu, Senior Edward Helminski, Exchange Monitor Publications, Adviser, Posiva Research (Finland) and Monica Inc. (USA) Hammarstrom, Director of the Technology Lead Organizer: Gary Benda Department, SKB (Sweden). Add’l Organizer(s): James Gallagher, Edward Helminski Panel Reporter: Leslie Jardine Session 4 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM Room 104AB This panel will include senior US DOE Managers speaking on the pressing issues facing the US DOE Worldwide Waste Management Regulatory and sites. Senior managers will update the attendees on Oversight Crosscutting Programs: An Update what has transpired the last year and provide detailed direction on the future US DOE Office of Environmental Management (EM) goals and Co-Chairs: Christopher Timm, PECOS Management objectives. Services, Inc.; Ray Clark, US EPA (USA) Lead Organizer: Ray Clark Add’l Organizer(s): Christopher Timm, Malgorzata Panelists include: Dae Chung, Principal Deputy K. Sneve Assistant Secretary of Environmental Management; Paper Reviewer: Christopher Timm Merle Sykes, Chief Business Officer; Frank Marcinowski, Deputy Assistant Secretary - Technical and Regulatory Support; and Jack Surash, 10:05 Update on the Radioactive Waste Position Deputy Assistant Secretary - Acquisition and Contract in the UK - 11435 Support, US DOE (USA). John Dalton, Nuclear Decommissioning Authority (United Kingdom)

30 Monday AM

10:30 Report on Waste Disposal Workshops for Session 6 a Radiological Dispersal Device (RDD) 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM Room 105C Attack in an Urban Area - 11543 Daniel Schultheisz, Paul Kudarauskas, Paul Lemieux, James Michael; Cayce Parrish, Jeff World-Wide Topics on Packaging Design and Pike, Eugene Jablonowski, US EPA (USA) Testing 10:55 High-Level Waste Insights for Re- Processing Spent Fuel - 11462 Co-Chairs: Richard Yoshimura, Sandia National John Greeves, Jim Lieberman, Talisman Laboratory; Daniel Jordan, Enercon Svcs. (USA) International, LLC (USA) Lead Organizer: Olaf Oldiges Add’l Organizer(s): Paul Jones, Mike Snyder 11:20 Observations and Thoughts Whilst Paper Reviewer: Mike Snyder Waiting For The Blue Ribbon Commission Report - 11247 Leif Eriksson, Nuclear Waste Dispositions; 10:05 UK Low-Level Waste Repository Site: George Dials, B&W Technical Services; (USA) Standardizing the Design and Transport of Packages to Contain Low Activity Radioactive Wastes in the UK - 11459 Session 5 Mark Flynn, Low Level Waste Repository 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM Room 101C (United Kingdom) 10:30 Transportation of Spent Research Reactor Recent Changes among Mixed and Hazardous Fuel to USA - 11110 Waste Classification and Disposal Regulations Franz Hilbert, Nuclear Cargo + Service GmbH (Germany) Co-Chairs: Gabriele Bandt, TÜV NORD EnSys 10:55 Testing of a Transport Cask for Research Hannover (Germany); Holger Spann, E.ON Reactor Spent Fuel - 11037 Kernkraft GmbH (Germany) Rogerio Mourao, Luis Silva, Center for the Lead Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Gabriele Bandt Development of Nuclear Technology; Carlos Add’l Organizer: Heinz Kroeger Alexandre Miranda, Miguel Mattar Neto, Miguel Mattar Neto, IPEN (Brazil); Roberto Saliba, 10:05 Realization of Requirements on Non- Fernando Quintana, Oscar Novara, CNEA/CAC Radioactive Waste Package Constituents (Argentina) - 11441 11:20 Approach and Procedure to Develop LILW Peter Brennecke, Karin Kugel, Stefan Transport System - Lessons Learned from Steyer, Federal Office for Radiation Protection; Korean Transport System Development Wilma Boetsch, Claudia Haider, Detlef Project - 11258 Gründler, ISTec GmbH (Germany) Sun Kee Lee, Hyundai Engineering Company; 10:30 Water Law Specific Regulation of the Jea Ho Park, Korea Nuclear Engineering & German Repository Konrad - 11474 Services Corp.; Suk Nam Lim, Korea Hagen G. Jung, Cornelia Scupin, Lower Radioactive Waste Management Corp. Saxony Water Management (Germany) (Republic of Korea) 10:55 Disposal of Potentially Neutron Activated PCB Capacitors at Argonne National Session 7 Laboratory through the Authorized 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM Room 103AB Release Process - 11064 Jing-Jy Cheng, S.Y. Chen, Noreen Decommissioning - International Programmatic Brachmann, Stephen Butala, Frank Brumwell, Overview Argonne National Laboratory; Antanas Co-Chairs: William Murphie, US DOE (USA); Bindokas, Andrew Gabel, Paul Neeson, US Anja Graf, WAK GmbH (Germany) DOE (USA) Lead Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Jas Devgun 11:20 Disposal of Bruce Power's Mixed Liquid Additional Add’l Organizer(s): Maria Lindberg, Waste - 11460 Bernard Poncet Sriram Suryanarayan, Aamir Husain, Kinectrics Inc.; Sana Husain, Mike Grey, 10:05 Recent Decommissioning Achievements Candesco Corporation (Canada) at Sellafield - 11132 Russell Mellor, Sellafield Ltd (United Kingdom) 10:30 The Future of Decommissioning at AWE Aldermaston - 11211 Jim Robertson, AWE (United Kingdom)

31 Monday AM

10:55 Delivery of an Integrated Change Decommissioning of Nuclear Facilities Program within the Decommissioning Contaminated with Polychlorinated Directorate at Sellafield - 11284 Biphenyls (PCBs) - 11198 Simon Bremer, Angela Mackintosh, Sellafield Nancy Lowry, Savannah River Nuclear Ltd (United Kingdom) Solutions, LLC (USA) 10:55 Establishing Final End State for a Retired Session 8 Nuclear Weapons Production Reactor; Collaboration Between Stakeholders, 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM Room 106A Regulators and the Federal Government - 11052 HLW, SNF/UNF and Long-lived Alpha/TRU- Christopher Bergren, Savannah River Programs and Policies Nuclear Solutions, LLC; Mary Flora, Savannah River Site; Helen Belencan, Ray Hannah, Rita Co-Chairs: Sal Golub, US DOE; Lisa Burns, Stubblefield, US DOE (USA) Wastren Advantage (USA) 11:20 Comparing Public Response to Emerging Lead Organizer: Harry Babad and Nuclear Waste Disposal Add’l Organizer(s): Lisa Burns, Sal Golub Technologies: A Case Study - 11380 Paper Reviewer: Sal Golub Helen Neill, Susanna Priest, Anna Lukemeyer, University of Nevada, Las Vegas 10:05 Management of High-Level Waste and (USA) Used Nuclear Fuel at DOE Sites - 11478 Anthony Kluk, Hitesh Nigam, Nancy Buschman, US DOE (USA) Session 10 10:30 CEA’s Radioactive Waste Management 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM Room 106C Policy - 11034 Marc Butez, Didier Lebrun, Christophe Icard, Innovative Applications in Information and CEA (France) Knowledge Management 10:55 Waste Management Research by the US DOE Office of Nuclear Energy- 11564 Co-Chairs: Michelle Barker, USACE; John Lowe, John Vienna, Pacific Northwest National CH2M HILL (USA) Laboratory; Terry Todd, Idaho National Lead Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Margaret Laboratory; James Bresee, US DOE (USA) MacDonell 11:20 A Comprehensive Approach to Deal with Add’l Organizer: Michelle Barker the Nuclear Waste Problem - 11452 Mario Carelli, Edward Lahoda, Fausto 10:05 Radionuclide Inventory and Distribution Franceschini, Westinghouse Electric Company, Program (RIDP): A User Relational LLC; Bojan Petrovic, Georgia Institute of Database for Preservation and Analysis of Technology (USA) Historic Measurements of Radionuclides in Soil - 11235 Karen Gray, David Shafer, Desert Research Session 9 Institute (USA) 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM Room 106B 10:30 Laboratory Information Management Strategy for Vitrification Support - 11143 Communication of Technical Issues Aruna Arakali, Thomas Lane, Jill Johnston, Robert Shannon, URS Corporation (USA) Co-Chairs: Lori Huffman, US DOE; Larry Klimek, 10:55 Maintaining Environmental Sustainability US Fish and Wildlife Services (USA) through Application of Environmental Lead Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Elizabeth Knowledge Management at the SRS - Bowers 11400 Add’l Organizer: W.T. (Sonny) Goldston Jeannette Hyatt, Eloy Saldivar, Jr., Savannah River Nuclear Solutions, LLC (USA) 11:20 D&D Knowledge Management 10:05 Public & Regulatory Acceptance of Information Tool - 2011 - 11297 Blending of Radioactive Waste vs. Himanshu Upadhyay, Leonel Lagos, Walter Dilution - 11018 Quintero, Peggy Shoffner, Florida W.T. (Sonny) Goldston, Savannah River International University; John De Gregory, Nuclear Solutions, LLC (USA) Jeffery Hunter, US DOE (USA) 10:30 Regulatory Strategies to Minimize Generation of Regulated Waste from Cleanup, Continued Use or

32 Monday PM

Session 11 The second panel will start after a 10 minute Break - Optional following the first panel. It will include 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM Room 101B participants from Sellafield Ltd, the NDA, NNL and US DOE. The goal of the panel will be to share Advances in Nuclear Safety Management management and technical challenges and how they were overcome by working together and Co-Chairs: Kim Auclair, KD Auclair & Associates, building from lessons learned. The NDA also has a LLC; Larry Regens, University of Oklahoma Health cooperation agreement with US DOE to share Sciences Center (USA) experience to mutual benefit. Lead Organizer: Kim Auclair Paper Reviewer: Larry Regens Panelists include: Ian Hudson, Head of Programme Sellafield NDA; Todd Wright, Deputy Managing Director Sellafield Ltd; Russ Mellor, 10:05 An Establishment of a Calculation Executive Director Decommissioning, Sellafield Ltd; Framework for the Operational Safety Mike Johnson, Executive Director Waste Assessment of KRS - 11267 Management Sellafield Ltd; Graham Fairhall, Chief Meejeong Hwang, Jongtae Jeong, Korea Science and Technology Officer, National Nuclear Atomic Energy Research Institute (Republic of Laboratory; Ron Gorham, Head of Supply Chain Korea) Development NDA (UK); Dave Moody, Manager, US 10:30 Development of a Seismic Risk DOE Savannah River Operations Office and Steve Assessment System for Low and Schneider, Director for the Office of Waste Intermediate Level Radioactive Waste Processing, US DOE (USA). Repository: Current Status of Year 1 Research - 11393 Minkyu Kim, In-Kil Choi, Jongtae Jeong, Session 13 Korea Atomic Energy Research Institute 1:30 PM - 3:10 PM Room 105B (Republic of Korea) Panel: Progress by the US National Blue Ribbon February 28, Monday PM Commission on America's Nuclear Future - What Have They Been Told and Who Are They Listening To? Session 12 1:30 PM - 5:00 PM Room 102B Co-Chairs: Roger Nelson, US DOE; Dorothy Davidson, AREVA (USA) Panel: European Featured Site: Sellafield - Lead Organizer: Roger Nelson Accomplishments and Challenges from Past Add’l Organizer(s): Dorothy Davidson, Andrew Practices and for Current and Future Missions Orrell with a Comparison to US DOE Sites Panel Reporter: Elizabeth Saris

This panel will focus on the Blue Ribbon Commission Co-Chairs: Angie Jones, AMEC Earth & Environmental (USA); Fred Sheil, Sheil Consulting, which filed their charter with Congress the week Ltd. (United Kingdom) before WM2010. The Commission will conduct a Lead Organizer: Angie Jones comprehensive review of policies for managing the Add’l Organizer and Panel Reporter: Fred Sheil back end of the nuclear fuel cycle; including all alternatives for the storage, processing and disposal of civilian and defense used nuclear fuel and nuclear This session will consist of two panels. The first panel waste. The Commission will have conducted an entire will focus on the Sellafield site in Cumbria in the year of testimony and meetings prior to WM2011 and Northwest of England. The site is a large and complex will be finalizing its 18-month interim report to the nuclear chemical facility that has supported the UK’s administration when this panel will be held. Invited nuclear power program since the 1940's. Current panelists will include people and organizations who operations at Sellafield include processing of fuels have presented before the Commission over their removed from nuclear power stations, Mixed Oxide first year of deliberations. (MOX) fuel fabrication, storage of nuclear materials and radioactive wastes, remediation and D&D of legacy sites. This mission is being carried out under Panelists include: Dr. Richard Meserve, Blue contract to the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority Ribbon Commission; John Kessler, EPRI; Mark (NDA) by Sellafield Ltd. Peters, Argonne National Laboratory; Daniel Metlay, Nuclear Waste Technical Review Board and Clifford E. Singer, University of Illinois (USA).

33 Monday PM

Session 14 2. Status update from the Texas Low-Level Radioactive Waste Disposal Compact 3:15 PM - 5:00 PM Room 105B Commission including recent passage of a rule relating to waste import and export, Panel: The Future of the US DOE Yucca facility licensing and construction activities Mountain Site and Discussion of the and overview of Waste Control Specialists' Alternatives pending rate setting application. 3. US EPA report regarding coordination and Co-Chairs: Eric Knox, URS Corporation; Paul execution of clean-up from a hypothetical Dickman, Argonne National Laboratory (USA) incident involving a radiological dispersion Lead Organizer: Dorothy Davidson device and an overview of the Liberty RadEx Add’l Organizer(s): Robert Edmonds, Leif Eriksson exercises. Panel Reporter: Robert Edmonds 4. US NRC agency activities and hot topics including revising the BTP on concentration This panel will focus on the current status of and the averaging and encapsulation, unique waste challenges facing the US national SNF and HLW streams (depleted uranium and blended disposal program in light of recent political, legal and waste), guidance development & rulemaking regulatory events. The panel will be comprised of and consideration of risk invited experts in radioactive waste management and informed/performance-based revision to 10 disposal, as well as representatives of groups CRF Part 61. affected by the outcome of the on going events. 5. Regulatory activities in the State of Utah Panelists include: Rod McCullum, Nuclear Energy including the draft prospective performance Institute; Joe Hezir, EOP Group, Inc. and former assessment rule, by-product material Deputy Associate Director of Office of Management rulemaking, draft administrative proceedings and Budget; David Blee, Nuclear Infrastructure rule, blending and classification position Council; Barry Hartman, K&L Gates, Lead Counsel statements and depleted uranium for Individual Plantiffs in Ferguson v. Obama; Ed performance assessment rule. Davis, Sustainable Nuclear Task Force; Darrell Lacy, Nye County, Nevada and Dale Klein, former Panelists include: Leonard Slosky, Rocky Mountain Chairman of US NRC. Low-Level Radioactive Waste Board; Michael Ford, Texas Low-Level Radioactive Waste Disposal Compact Commission; Dan Schultheisz, US EPA; Larry Session 15 Camper, US NRC and Rusty Lundberg, Utah 1:30 PM - 3:10 PM Room 104AB Radiation Control Board.

Panel: Hot Topics and Emerging Issues in US Session 16 Commercial Low-Level Radioactive Waste 3:15 PM - 5:00 PM Room 104AB Management

Selected Key Topics in US Commercial LLW Co-Chairs: Leonard Slosky, Rocky Mountain LLW Management Board; James Kennedy, US NRC (USA) Lead Organizer: Linda Beach Add’l Organizer and Panel Reporter: Todd Lovinger Co-Chairs: Colleen Owens, DeNuke Contracting Services, Inc.; Ted Buckner, Southeast Compact Commission (USA) This panel will focus on emerging issues in Lead Organizer: Colleen Owens commercial LLW management in the US from the Add’l Organizer(s): Linda Beach, Ted Buckner perspective of five active members of the Low-Level Paper Reviewer: Linda Beach Radioactive Waste Forum, Inc. State, compact, federal and industry officials will share their views on a variety of timely and significant topics related to 3:20 Presentation of the Richard S. Hodes, M.D. low-level radioactive waste management, disposal Honor Award by Michael Mobley, Southeast and related issues. Topic to be discussed will Compact Commission for LLW to Christine include: Gelles, Director, Office of Disposal Operations - US DOE. The award is followed by the WM2011 Richard S. Hodes, M.D. Honor Lecture. 1. Overview and analysis of a recent decision by the US Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit 3:30 Bend, But Not Break – Crafting Radioactive in EnergySolutions v. Northwest Compact et. Waste Solutions in a Complex Environment al., affirming the compact's authority over - 11619 the Clive commercial LLW facility in Utah. Christine Gelles, US DOE (USA)

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4:10 Low-Level Waste Management Options: Session 18 Impact of Waste Control Specialists - 1:30 PM - 5:00 PM Room 105C 11627 Dan Burns, Waste Control Specialists LLC (USA) Worldwide Perspectives of Radioactive Waste Management - Challenges and Solutions 4:35 The First New Conventional Uranium Mill in the US in 30 Years – Status of the Pinon Ridge Project, Colorado - 11438 Co-Chairs: Christer Svemar, M&C Svemar Steven Brown, SHB Inc. (USA) Consulting (Sweden); Piero Risoluti, Sogin (Italy) Lead Organizer: John Mathieson Add’l Organizer(s): Gérald Ouzounian, Mark Session 17 Matthews 1:30 PM - 5:00 PM Room 103AB Paper Reviewer: Christer Svemar

Panel: Safety Management - Key to Effective 1:35 The French Policy for Radioactive Materials Performance Execution and Waste Management - 11056 Jean Luc Lachaume, Nuclear Safety Authority Co-Chairs: Joseph Yanek, Fluor Government Group; (France) Gerald Boyd, US DOE (USA) 2:00 The New Policy for Radioactive Waste Lead Organizer and Panel Reporter: Judith Connell Management and Site Selection for the Add’l Organizer(s): Joseph Yanek, Anthony Umek National Repository in Italy - 11053 Piero Risoluti, Fabio Chiaravalli, Luigi Brusa, This panel will focus on safety management as a key Sogin (Italy) to effective project performance. Regardless of the 2:25 Should WIPP Replace Yucca Mountain? - state of the economy, safety must be a business 11058 imperative and is a key element in the efficient and Christopher Timm, Jerry Fox, PECOS effective performance on projects – regardless of size Management Services, Inc. (USA) or complexity. Panel presentations and discussions will focus on latest trends in leveraging effective 2:50 Radioactive Waste Disposal Challenges in health, safety and environmental programs to Germany - 11442 improve project and operational performance across Peter Brennecke, Federal Office for Radiation a diverse set of business sectors. Attendees will Protection (Germany) benefit from both the presentations and opportunity 3:15 Break - Optional to have an interactive dialogue with senior industry 3:20 Creation of the Radioactive Waste executives representing government and commercial Management System in the Russian sectors both nationally and internationally. Federation - 11266 Leonid Bolshov, Igor Linge, Vasily Kovalchuk, The session will be co-moderated and will comprise of Alexander Iordanov, Nuclear Safety Institute; both individual presentations on industry trends and Alexander Abramov, Rosatom State Nuclear a focused panel on a single subject (i.e., Human Energy Corporation; Yuri Polyakov, Radioactive Performance Improvement) to allow detailed Waste Management Enterprise (Russia) discussions between the panel participants and 3:45 Stakeholder Trust for the Disposal of presenters. Highly Radioactive Wastes in the USA, Japan, UK and Europe - 11558 Panelists include: Tony Umek, Savannah River Bill Lawless, Paine College (USA) Nuclear Solutions; Ed Foulke, Partner, Fisher & 4:10 Geologic Disposal Options in the USA - Phillips LLP; Joe Yanek, EFCOG Chair/Fluor; William 11299 Roege, Director-Office of Corporate Safety Analysis, Frank Hansen, E. Hardin, A. Orrell, Sandia US DOE; Jeffrey Allison, Office of Special Projects, National Laboratories (USA) US DOE – SRS; and James Hylko, EC Government Services, LLC.

35 Monday PM

Session 19 Venetz, Dennis Washenfelder, Washington River Protection Solutions; Kayle Boomer, Technical 1:30 PM - 5:00 PM Room 106A Integration Program; Jeremy Johnson, US DOE (USA) Storage and Retrieval of HLW - Part 1

Co-Chairs: Edward Ketusky, Savannah River Session 20 Remediation, LLC; Tom Brouns, Pacific Northwest 1:30 PM - 3:15 PM Room 106B National Laboratory (USA) Lead Organizer: Tom Brouns Management of Nuclear Power Plant Dry Waste Add’l Organizer(s): Keith Miller, Edward Ketusky Paper Reviewer: Harry Babad Co-Chairs: Wolfgang Steinwarz, Siempelkamp Nukleartechnik GmbH (Germany); Roger Stigers, 1:35 Pilot-Scale Test Results of a Thin Film PPL Susquehanna, LLC (USA) Evaporator System for Management of Lead Organizer: Wolfgang Steinwarz Liquid High-Level Waste at Hanford - 11364 Add’l Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Mark Lewis Robert Wilson, Travis Beck, Jeff Larkin, Columbia Energy & Environmental Services, Inc.; Rick Tedeschi, John Corbett, Washington 1:35 Industry Response to the Changing River Protection Solutions (USA) Paradigm in Radwaste Management - 11606 2:00 Savannah River Site, Incipient Sludge Lisa Edwards, Electric Power Research Mixing in Nuclear Waste Tanks During Salt Institute (USA) Blending - 11086 Robert Leishear, Mark Fowley, Michael Poirier, 2:00 Expanded Applications of LPOP Method to Tim Steeper, Si Lee, Savannah River National Non-Flammable Waste Treatments - 11572 Laboratory; Ken Parkinson, Savannah River Gen-ichi Katagiri, Morio Fujisawa, Fuji Electric Remediation, LLC (USA) systems Co., Ltd; Kazuya Sano, Norikazu Higashhiura, Japan Atomic Energy Agency 2:25 Instrumentation for Real Time Monitoring (Japan) of the 3-Dimensional Particulate Distribution in the Hanford Double Shell 2:25 Custom Engineered Remotely Controlled Tank Small-Scale Mixing Demonstration Robotic Waste Sorting and Packaging Platform - 11242 System - 11355 Paul Townson, Steve Wright, Jesse Jensen, Teo Grochowski, Robatel Technologies LLC Matthew Vanatta, EnergySolutions (USA) (USA) 2:50 The Importance of Rheological Assessment 2:50 Comparative Analysis of Technologies for in the Mobilization, Mixing and Transport Treatment of Solid Radioactive Waste of of Nuclear Waste Sludges - 11195 Nuclear Power Plants - 11470 Neil Alderman, Nigel Heywood, BHR Group Ltd Mikhail Polkanov, Konstantin Semenov, (United Kingdom) Arthur Arustamov, Valeriy Gorbunov, Ilgiz Kadyrov, Alexander Kobelev, Fyodor Lifanov, 3:15 Break - Optional Sergey Dmitriev, SIA Radon Institute (Russia) 3:20 New Methods to Remove Stubborn Tank Heels using Agitation and Continuous Recirculation - 11207 Session 21 Jason Vitali, Savannah River Remediation, LLC 3:15 PM - 5:00 PM Room 106B (USA) 3:45 Use of Tank Retrieval Manipulator Systems Management of Nuclear Power Plant Liquid and in Nuclear Decommissioning - 11353 Wet Waste Marc Rood, Bradley Walpole, S.A. Technology (USA) Co-Chairs: Wolfgang Steinwarz, Siempelkamp 4:10 Corrosion Analysis of Carbon Steel Based Nukleartechnik GmbH (Germany); C. Clint Miller, on Hanford Site Liquid Waste Simulants - Pacific Gas & Electric (USA) 11128 Lead Organizer: Mark Lewis Bruce Wiersma, Elizabeth Hoffman, Savannah Add’l Organizer and Paper Reviewer: C. Clint Miller River National Laboratory; A. Felmy, Odeta Qafoku, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (USA) 3:20 Integrated System for Spent Ion-Exchange Resin Processing in Nuclear Power Station 4:35 Remote Visual Inspection of Hanford Site - 11164 Single Shell Tanks - 11335 Junya Okazaki, Shigeru Mihara, Tadashi Jason Engeman, Jessica Robocker, Theodore

36 Monday PM

Sasaki, Yasutomi Morimoto, Mikio Shimojo, 3:20 Development of Cleanup Goals for the Mitsushi Motoyama, Shizuo Teramoto, Yasuhiro Decommissioning of the West Valley Suzuki, Mamoru Numata, JGC Corporation; Demonstration Project - 11073 Katsuo Yamazaki, Kazufumi Taniguchi, Tatsumi Jim McNeil, Consultant; Moira Maloney, Martin Yamamoto, Yutaka Satou, Kouji Nojiri, Hiroshi Letourneau, US DOE; Zintars Zadins, Chenega Wada, Hirotaka Ooura, The Japan Atomic Power Global Services; Harry Fatkin, SAIC (USA) Company (Japan) 3:45 Thermal Analysis of a Special Grout 3:45 Successful Cesium Removal Campaign at Mixture for In-Situ Decommissioning - the Loviisa NPP, Finland - 11002 11389 Esko Tusa, Fortum Power and Heat (Finland) Nadia Lima, Cristian Acevedo, Leonel Lagos, 4:10 Improved Solidification of Liquid Waste Edgar Polo, Jose Rivera, Florida International Evaporation Concentrate - 11096 University (USA) Stasys Motiejunas, Gintautas Davainis, 4:10 Completion of the Removal, Packaging and Algirdas Vaidotas, Radioactive Waste Disposal of Hanford 327 Building Hot Cells Management Agency (Lithuania) - 11566 4:35 NPP Liquid Radioactive Waste Treatment Gary MacFarlan, WorleyParsons Polestar with Selective Extraction of Radionuclides (USA) - 11272 4:35 Establishing Reduced Load Factors when Alexander Savkin, SIA Radon (Russia) Calculating Structural Capacity and Clarification of NEC Guidance During Decommissioning and Demolition Work Session 22 (D&D) - 11514 1:30 PM - 5:00 PM Room 106C Kirk Dooley, Frank Rios, Jose Vargas, Justin Coleman, Patrick Holmes, CH2M-WG Idaho, LLC; Mark Slovak, Ascendent Engineering (USA) D&D of US DOE Facilities

Co-Chairs: Andrew Szilagyi, US DOE; Julia Tripp, Session 23 Idaho National Laboratory (USA) 1:30 PM - 5:00 PM Room 101B Lead Organizer: Andrew Szilagyi Add’l Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Julia Tripp Groundwater Remediation Projects

1:35 The Transfer of Excess Facilities, Materials, Co-Chairs: Bob Popielarczyk, CH2M HILL PRC, Inc.; and Waste into DOE’s Environmental John Morse, US DOE (USA) Management (EM) Program: Successes Lead Organizer: John Kristofzski Resulting from EM’s Transfer Review Add’l Organizer: Bob Popielarczyk Process - 11246 Paper Reviewer: David Wallace Mark Janaskie, Andrew Szilagyi, Theresa Kliczewski, US DOE; Charles Urland, Charles Negin, Michelle Gresalfi, Project Enhancement 1:35 Groundwater Pump and Treat Remediation Corporation (USA) System Overview, Hanford 200W Area - 11508 2:00 Assessment of the Potential for Hydrogen William Breedlove, CH2M HILL PRC, John Generation during Deactivation and Morse, Arlene Tortoso, US DOE; Ken Martins, Y- Decommissioning of Reactor Vessels at the 12 National Security Complex; Mark Byrnes, Savannah River Site - 11197 CH2M HILL, Inc.; Sally Simmons, FLUOR (USA) Bruce Wiersma, Mike Serrato, Christine Langton, Savannah River National Laboratory 2:00 A Groundwater Flow and Transport Model (USA) of Long-Term Radionuclide Migration in Central Frenchman Flat, Nevada Test Site - 2:25 Historical Hazard Identification Process for 11161 D&D - 11036 Naomi Becker, Edward Kwicklis, Los Alamos Paul Corrado, Lawrence Livermore National National Laboratory; Greg Ruskauff, Navarro Laboratory (USA) Nevada Environmental Services; Bill Wilborn, 2:50 D&D Toolbox Project – Technology US DOE; Nicole DeNovio, Golder & Associates Demonstration of Decontamination Gel and (USA) Strippable Coatings Applied Via Remote 2:25 Automated Water Level Measurements in Sprayer Platform - 11300 Small-Diameter Aquifer Tubes - 11476 Leonel Lagos, Peggy Shoffner, Florida Scott Petersen, Robert Edrington, Richard International University; Samuel Maggio, ICM, Mahood, CH2M HILL PRC; Paul Van Inc. (USA) Middlesworth, Northwest Software, Inc (USA) 3:15 Break - Optional

37 Monday PM

2:50 Mercury Remediation Using Dow’s 2:25 Early Progress in Building Confidence and Experimental XUS-43604.00 Ion-Exchange Partnerships with Northern First Nations Resin at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, and Communities in Low-Level Radioactive Tennessee, USA - 11042 Waste Remediation Projects in Canada - Charles Castello, Alexander Henao, Yelena 11321 Katsenovich, Leonel Lagos, Jeffrey Fan, Florida Robert Zelmer, Atomic Energy of Canada International University; Paul Taylor, Oak Limited; Liliana Benitez, Dave McCauley, Julie Ridge National Laboratory (USA) Brown, Natural Resources Canada (Canada) 3:15 Break – Optional 2:50 Superfund Job Training Initiative Engage 3:20 Groundwater Recharge in the Southern Communities by Offering Employment Amargosa Desert Using Surface-Runoff Opportunities - 11032 Chemistry - 11489 Rachel C Hall, Robert Pope, US EPA (USA) Omar Al-Qudah, John Walton, University of 3:15 Break - Optional Texas at El Paso; Arturo Woocay, Instituto 3:20 Implementing the National Low-Level Tecnologico de Ciudad Juarez; John Klenke, Nye Waste Program in the United Kingdom: An County Nuclear Waste Repository (USA) Exercise in Engagement and 3:45 Groundwater Remediation at the 100-HR-3 Communication - 11612 Operable Unit, Hanford Site, Washington - Martin Walkingshaw, Tim Hedahl, Richard 11507 Raaz, LLW Repsitory Ltd (United Kingdom) John Smoot, Fred Biebesheimer, J.A 3:45 Designing and Building a Radioactive . Eluskie, CH2M HILL PRC; T. Simpkin, CH2M Waste Deep Disposal Facility and including HILL, Inc.; M.J. Tonkin, A. Spiliotopoulus, the Local Stakeholders - 11527 Papadopulos & Associates (USA) Sebastien Farin, ANDRA (France) 4:10 Advancing “Natural” In Situ Remediation 4:10 Public Communication: Engaging Citizens for Treatment of Radionuclides in in the Nuclear Renaissance - 11250 Groundwater - 11621 Laurie Ford, Critical Path Consultants (USA) Scott Warner, AMEC (USA) 4:35 Lessons Learned from the Korean Nuclear 4:35 Restoration of Groundwater at LaRosita Waste Disposal Issues in Terms of Risk In-Situ Uranium Recovery Project - 11613 Communication Processes - 11171 Michelle Rehmann, HER Creative Solutions, Chang-Ju Lee, Korea Institute of Nuclear LLC; Mark Pelizza, Uranium Resources Inc.; Safety (Republic of Korea) Katie Sweeney, National Mining Association (USA) Poster Session 25

Session 24 1:30 PM - 5:00 PM 1st Floor Foyer 1:30 PM - 5:00 PM Room 101C Posters: HLW/SNF & Long Lived Alpha – A-E

Engaging Citizens - Lessons Learned from Topic A: Lessons Learned in HLW, SNF/UNF and Around the World Long-Lived Alpha/TRU Co-Chairs: Keith Miller, National Nuclear Laboratory Co-Chairs: Heather Klebba, Nuclear Filter (United Kingdom); Terri Fellinger, Savannah River Technology (USA); Cedric Garnier, CEA (France) Remediation, LLC (USA) Lead Organizer: John Dalton Lead Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Keith Miller Add’l Organizer(s): Heather Klebba, Dale Bignell Paper Reviewer: Heather Klebba A1. Operational Experiences and Future Plans for Hungarian Spent Fuel Storage - 11184 1:35 Holding a Technical Dialog with Local Miklos Ordogh, Jozsef Mikula, SOM System Kft; Stakeholders: Test Case at the La Hague Istvan Barnabas, Public Limited Company for Reprocessing Plant - 11060 RadWaste Management; Barnabas Nagy, Ludivine Gilli, Igor Le Bars, Nicolas Charrin, PURAM; Tibor Eigner, Ferenc Leber, Paks Institut de Radioprotection et de Sûrete Nuclear Power Plant Ltd. (Hungary); Chris Nucléaire (France) Carter, Babcock Nuclear (United Kingdom); 2:00 Crisis Communication: Lessons From the A2. The Role of a Post-Irradiation Examination BP Oil Spill or How to Avoid "Just Stepping Facility in the Treatment & Disposal of off the Curb and Getting Hit by the Bus" - Problematic and Poorly Characterised 11080 Nuclear Fuels - 11145 Eliot Brenner, Rebecca Schmidt, US NRC David Willey, National Nuclear Laboratory (USA) (United Kingdom)

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A3. An Improved Characterization Method for C2. Development and Deployment of Vacuum International Accountancy Measurements Salt Distillation at the Savannah River Site - of Fresh and Irradiated Mixed Oxide (MOX) 11178 Fuel: Helping Achieve Continual Monitoring Robert Pierce, Savannah River National and Safeguards Through the Fuel Cycle Laboratory (USA) - 11433 C3. Kinetics of Aluminum Formation in the Louise Evans, Stephen J. Tobin, Brian Boyer, Caustic Side Solvent Extraction (CSSX) Stephen Croft, Howard O. Menlove, M.A. Schear, Process - 11046 M.T. Swinhoe, LANL (USA); Andrew Worrall, Rebecca Toghiani, Larry Pearson, Jeff Lindner, National Nuclear Laboratory (United Kingdom) Laura Smith, Punith Naik, Mississippi State University (USA) Topic B: Storage and Retrieval of Liquid and C4. Application of Phosphorus-Containing Ion Solid HLW Exchangers for the Recovery and Co-Chairs: Thomas Michener, Pacific Northwest Separation of Uranium and Transuranic National Laboratory; Jonathan Bricker, Savannah Elements - 11490 River Remediation, LLC (USA) Vladimir Gelis, Vitaly Milyutin, Evgeny Kozlitin, Lead Organizer: Terri Fellinger Natalya Nekrassova, Yulia Shumilova, Paper Reviewer: Edward Ketusky Froumkin's Institute of Physical Chemistry and Electrochemistry, RAS (Russia) B1. Gas Retention and Release Test for Low Yield Stress Non-Newtonian Fluids (NNF) Topic D: Immobilization of Wastes from - 11289 HLW/SNF/UNF Processing Amer Awwad, Romani Patel, Georgio Tachiev, Co-Chairs: Ned Bibler, Savannah River Nuclear Nitin Yadav, Dwayne McDaniel, David Roelant, Solutions - Retired; Joseph Westsik, PNNL (USA) Florida International University (USA) Lead Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Harry Babad B2. A Lattice Boltzmann Simulation of Gas Bubbles in Multiphase Flows with High D1. Transformation of Spent Silver Zeolite Density Ratios - 11304 Sorbent by Ball-Milling Assisted XRD Seckin Gokaltun, Dwayne McDaniel, Florida Amorphization - 11233 International University (USA) Daisuke Hirabayashi, Yusuke Tanada, Kayo B3. The Hanford Waste Feed Delivery Sawada, Youichi Enokida, Nagoya University Operations Research Model - 11248 (Japan) Joanne Berry, EnergySolutions; Benjamin D2. Mathematical Modeling of Mass-Transfer Gallaher, Washington River Protection Solutions Processes in the Rotary Calciner - 11491 (USA) Tatiana Podymova, A.A. Bochvar's High- B4. Numerical Simulations of Pulsed-Air Mixing Technology Research Institute of Innorganic Technology using Multiphase Computational Materials; Vladimir Kascheev, Pavel Poluektov, Fluid Dynamics Methods - 11301 Aleksey Mityanin, VNIINM (Russia) Rinaldo Gonzalez Galdamez, Stephen Wood, D3. Increased Waste Loadings for Hanford and Seckin Gokaltun, Florida International University Savannah River Site HLW and Hanford LAW B5. EM-31: Alternative Enhanced Chemical Glass Formulated with a New Approach by Cleaning Program for Sludge Heel Removal GeoMatrix Solutions Inc. - 11093 - 11220 Arthur Gribetz, Anatoly Chekhmir, Lawrence William King, Bruce Wiersma, Michael Hay, Shore, GeoMatrix Solutions Inc. (USA) Frank Pennebaker, Savannah River National D4. The Effect of Waste Loading and Glass Laboratory (USA) Structural Factors on Structure and Chemical Durability of SB2 and SB4 SRS Topic C: Reprocessing and Separation of Waste Glasses - 11397 SNF/UNF and HLW Sergey Stefanovsky, SIA Radon Institute Co-Chairs: Terri Fellinger, Savannah River (Russia); James Marra, SRNL (USA) Remediation, LLC; Reid Peterson, Pacific Northwest D5. The Effect of Waste Loading on Phase National Laboratory (USA) Composition, Structure and Chemical Lead Organizer: Terri Fellinger Durability of Glassy Materials for Paper Reviewer: Robert Jubin Immobilization of High-Sodium/Aluminum Waste - 11475 C1. A Study on the Proliferation Resistance Sergey Stefanovsky, Alexandra Sorokaletova, Assessment of Nuclear Fuel Cycles - 11094 Anna Sorokina, SIA Radon Institute; Boris Yoon Hee Lee, Jongkuk Lee, KAIST (Republic of Nikonov, Institute of Geology of Ore Deposits, Korea); Kun Jai Lee, KUSTAR (United Arab Petrography, Mineralogy and Geochemistry, RAS Emirates) (Russia)

39 Monday PM

D6. Evaluation and Selection of 99Tc Getters for S3. Physical and Chemical Properties of Sequestration of Liquid Secondary Waste Tributyl Phosphate/Diluent/Nitric Acid Resulting from Vitrification of Radioactive System - 11577 Waste from Hanford - 11167 Amber Wright, University of Nevada Las Shas Mattigod, Joseph Westsik, Pacific Vegas (USA) Northwest National Laboratory (USA) S4. Developing Open-Source Video Games to Educate the Public about Nuclear Energy - Topic E: Influence of Environments on Deep 11385 Disposal Sites Joshua Peterson, University of Texas at Co-Chairs: Anthony Banford, National Nuclear Austin; Philip Marquis, North Carolina Laboratory (United Kingdom); Terri Fellinger, University; Sai Kiran Mylavarapu, Ohio State Savannah River Remediation, LLC (USA) University; Bao H. Truong, Massachusetts Lead Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Tom Brouns Institute of Technology (USA); Viktor Larsson, Chalmers University of Technology (Sweden) E1. Super-Deep HLW Self-Disposal Option S5. Characterization of High Level Waste from - 11065 a Hybrid Fusion-Fission Engine for Michael Ojovan, University of Sheffield (United Enhanced Repository Performance - 11629 Kingdom); Vladimir Kascheev, Pavel Poluektov, Elizabeth M. Beckett, Purdue University (USA) VNIINM (Russia) S6. Economic Feasibility of Spent Fuel E2. Identification of Eu (III) Sorption into CSH Reprocessing vs. Direct Geologic Disposal - Gel by the Changes of Fluorescence 11630 Emission Spectrum and BET Surface Area Marc Goldsmith, Bryan Bittner, Texas State - 11192 Technical College (USA) Keisuke Shirai, Yuichi Niibori, Hiroaki S7. Wastewater to Energy - 11633 Yoshikawa, Hitoshi Mimura, Tohoku University Sumayeh Freiwan, Russell Chianelli, Barry (Japan) Benedict, Omar Al-Qudah, University of Texas E3. Sensitivity Analysis for Scenarios Relevant at El Paso (USA) to Evolution of Overpack and Buffer S8. Analysis of Remediation Strategies for Material - 11176 Radium-Contaminated Soils - 11641 Seiji Takeda, Masatoshi Watanabe, Hideo Lisa Cox, University of Wyoming (USA) Kimura, Japan Atomic Energy Agency (Japan) S9. Immobilisation of Spent Ion Exchange Resin (NRW-40) Using Borosilicate Glass; Poster Session 26 Thermal Analysis and Encapsulation - 11634 1:30 PM - 5:00 PM Exhibit Hall Nasir Hamodi, The University of Manchester (United Kingdom) Student Poster Competition: The Next S10. Radiological Emergency Preparedness in Generation - Industry Leaders of Tomorrow Nepal - 11645 Chhavi Raj Bhatt, Norwegian University of Life Co-Chairs: Leonel Lagos, Florida International Sciences (Norway); Shanta Lall Shrestha, University; Robert Berry, Foxfire Scientific Inc. Tribhuvan University Teaching Hospital; Kamal (United Kingdom) K Shrestha, Nuclear Society of Nepal (Nepal) Lead Organizer: Leonel Lagos S11. Using Surface-Runoff Chemistry for Add’l Organizer(s): Robert Berry, Michelle Indicating the Groundwater Recharge in Rehmann the Southern Amargosa Desert - 11649 Omar Al-Qudah, John Walton, University of S1. Determination of Decontamination Factor Texas at El Paso; Arturo Woocay, Instituto of Pyroprocessing Through Safety Tecnologico de Ciudad Juarez; John Klenke, Nye Assessment of Geological Repository County Nuclear Waste Repository (USA) - 11673 S12. Hazardous Waste Ion-Exchange by a HyoSook Jung, Sungyeol Choi, Il Soon Hwang, Potassium Metal Sulfide - 11651 Seoul National University (Republic of Korea) Joshua Mertz, Mercouri Kanatzidis, S2. Materials, Accountability, and Process Northwestern University; Emmanouil Manos, Control with Ultraviolet-Visible University of Cyprus (Cyprus) Spectroscopy - 11453 S13. Modeling of the Horizontal Pipeline Flow of Jamie Warburton, Nick Smith, Ken Non-Newtonian Nuclear Waste Slurries - Czerwinski, University of Nevada, Las Vegas 11655 (USA) Mario Roberto Rojas, University of Arizona (USA)

40 Tuesday AM

S14. An Approach for the Decontamination and S26. Study on Uranium (VI) Sorption on Decommissioning of Stacks at the Oak Hanford Sediment - 11670 Ridge National Laboratory - 11653 Melissa Sanchez, Prabhakar Pant, Leonel Richard Colbert, University of Tennessee, Lagos, Florida International University (USA) Knoxville; Thomas Conley, Ken Schneider, Oak S27. Unplugging of High Level Waste Pipelines: Ridge National Laboratory (USA) Method of Characteristics - 11671 S15. Simulation of Rising Bubbles Using the Stephen Wood, Florida International Multiphase Lattice Boltzmann Method - University (USA) 11656 S28. Benchmark Study on Applied Potential of Merlin Ngachin, Seckin Gokaltun, Michael Mark-IV Electrorefiner to Validate Three- Sukop, Florida International University (USA) Dimensional Electrochemo-Hydrodynamic S16. CYCLUS: A Modular Fuel Cycle Simulator Model for Electrorefining Process - 11672 Platform - 11660 Jaeyeong Park, Il-Soon Hwang, Sungyeol Kathryn Huff, Paul Wilson, University of Choi, Seoul National University (Republic of Wisconsin (USA) Korea) S17. Cellular Concrete/Grout: An Innovative S29. Assessment for the Suitability for a LLW Material For In-Situ Decommissioning - Radioactive Waste Storage Facility in 11661 Northern Louisiana - 11674 Alessandra Monetti, Florida International Charles Wilson, Louisiana State University, University (USA) Baton Rouge (USA) S18. AFT Impulse™ Modeling of Waterhammer Transients - 11662 March 1, Tuesday AM Jose Matos, Florida International University (USA) S19. Understanding Mercury Transfer to the Session 27 Sulfate-Reducing Bacteria Desulfovibrio 8:30 AM - 12:00 PM Room 102B Desulfuricans - 11663 Amaury Betancourt, Georgio Tachiev, Yelena Panel: Emerging Issues with US DOE Prime Katsenovich, Florida International University; Contractors Dwayne Elias, Oak Ridge National Laboratory (USA) Co-Chairs: Pete Knollmeyer, Savannah River S20. Peristaltic Crawler for the Removal of High Nuclear Solutions; Judith Connell, Fluor Level Waste Plugs - 11664 Government Group (USA) Lee Brady, Florida International University Lead Organizer and Panel Reporter: Judith Connell (USA) Add’l Organizer: Pete Knollmeyer S21. Asynchronous Pulsing as a Means of Unplugging Pipelines - 11665 This panel will feature senior executives from large Janty Ghazi, Jose Varona, Leonel Lagos, and small US DOE sites addressing issues in the Florida International University (USA) DOE’s waste and environmental cleanup program. S22. EFCOG Lessons Learned and Best Practices Multiple, timely topics concerning critical or emerging - 11666 issues or challenges within the prime contractor Heidi Henderson, Peggy Shoffner, Leonel community will be the focus of the discussion. Such Lagos, Florida International University (USA) potential topics include progress, issues on, with S23. The Effect of Arthrobacter Bacteria on integrating ARRA activities and funding with site Uranium Release from Meta-autunite - mission/base funding and regulatory requirements 11667 and schedules. Questions will be posed to the Sheidyn Ng, Florida International University panelists for response followed by discussion. (USA) S24. A Numerical Model for Air Dispersion at the Panelists include: John Lehew, President, CH2M Moab Site - 11668 HILL PRC; John Fulton, President, CH2M-WG Idaho, Kanchana Iyer, Mandar Zope, Georgio LLC; John McKibbin, President, West Valley Tachiev, Florida International University (USA) Environmental Services; Ryan Dodd, Deputy General Manager, Washington Closure Hanford; S25. Feasibility of Using Embedded Wireless Dave Olson, Deputy Proj. Manager, Savannah River Sensors for In-Situ Decommissioning Remediation, LLC.; Robert Warther, Vice President Tasks and Environmental Monitoring - - EM, B&W Technical Services; Ken Rueter, Acting 11669 Chief Operating Officer, Washington River Protection Elicek Delgado-Cepero, Florida International Solutions; and Bob Nichols, Director – Surveillance University (USA) & Maintenance, D&D, Fluor-B&W Portsmouth, LLC.

41 Tuesday AM

Session 28 Northwest National Laboratory; Liyuan Liang, Oak Ridge National Laboratory; Robert 8:30 AM - 12:00 PM Room 105B Aylward, Savannah River National Laboratory (USA) Panel: Worldwide Regulatory Oversight of 9:50 The Office of Nuclear Materials Radioactive Legacy Sites Disposition Fiscal Year 2011 Research & Development Activities - 11537 Co-Chairs: Malgorzata K. Sneve, Norwegian Edgardo DeLeon, Nancy Buschman, US DOE Radiation Protection Authority (Norway); Ray Clark, (USA) US EPA (USA) 10:15 Break - Optional Lead Organizer: Ray Clark Add’l Organizer(s): Malgorzata K. Sneve, Larry 10:20 The Office of Deactivation and Camper Decommissioning Research & Panel Reporter: Graham Smith Development Program for Fiscal Year 2011 - 11533 Andrew Szilagyi, US DOE; Paula Kirk, Oak This panel will focus on the regulatory supervision of Ridge National Laboratory; Richard Abitz, John legacy sites including uranium legacy and describing Gladden, Savannah River National Laboratory regulatory challenges related to the supervision of (USA) D&D, rehabilitation or remediation of legacy sites. Practical solutions are sought on how to regulate 10:45 The US DOE Office of Environmental situations and activities falling outside of the existing Management International Program regulatory regime. Collaboration - 11526 Ana Han, US DOE; James Marra, Savannah River National Laboratory (USA) Panelists include: Russell Edge, IAEA (Austria); Mikhail Kiselev, Federal Medical Biological Agency 11:10 Leveraged Activities and Collaboration FMBA (Russia); Alexander Kim, Atomic Energy Supporting the Office of Technology Commission (Kazakhstan); Stuart Walker, US EPA; Innovation & Development - 11532 Malgorzata Sneve, Norwegian Radiation Protection Pramod Mallick, US DOE; Sharon Marra, Authority (Norway); Natalya Klimova and Natalya Savannah River National Laboratory (USA) Shandala, FMBA (Russia). 11:35 Overview of Impacts of Technology Deployment on the Mission of the US DOE Session 29 EM - 11535 Skip Chamberlain, US DOE; Daniel McCabe, 8:30 AM - 12:00 PM Room 104AB Savannah River National Laboratory (USA)

The Role of the DOE Office of Technology, Innovation and Development in Reducing Risk Session 30 8:30 AM - 12:00 PM Room 105C Co-Chairs: Yvette Collazo, US DOE; Jeff Griffin, Savannah River National Laboratory (USA) Environmental Remediation Progress Toward Lead Organizer: Kurt Gerdes Closure of Contaminated Sites Add’l Organizer(s): Kurt Gerdes, John Shultz Paper Reviewer: Rosa Ramirez Co-Chairs: Mark Frei, Longenecker & Associates; Susan Walter, AECOM (USA) 8:35 US DOE Office of Technology Innovation Lead Organizer: Kurt Gerdes and Development – Integration of the EM Add’l Organizer: Mark Frei R&D Program in 2010 and Beyond - 11529 Paper Reviewer: Susan Walter Yvette Collazo, US DOE; Jeff Griffin, Savannah River National Laboratory (USA) 8:35 Restoration and Assessment of the Extent 9:00 The Office of Waste Processing Fiscal of Contamination of the National Year 2011 Program Plan for Research & Radioactive Waste Storage and Disposal Development - 11531 Site in Tajikistan - 11481 Steven Schneider, US DOE; Jeff Griffin, Tjalle Vandergraaf, Providence College Savannah River National Laboratory (USA) (Canada); Dzhamshed Abdushukurov, 9:25 The Office of Groundwater & Soil Nazirzhon Buriev, Academy of Science of Remediation Fiscal Year 2011 Research & Republic of Tajikistan (Tajikistan) Development Program - 11513 9:00 Environmental Monitoring and Kurt Gerdes, Skip Chamberlain, Rosa Development of Radio-ecological Criteria Ramirez, Karen Skubal, Justin Marble, US and Norms during Remediation of the RW DOE; Dawn Wellman, Amoret Bunn, Pacific and SNF Temporary Storage Sites in

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Russia - 11520 8:35 Green Remediation of Perchlorate- Evgeny Metlyaev, Natalia K. Shandala, Contaminated Soil by On-Site Sergey Kiselev, Sergey Ahromeev, Vladimir Bioremediation at an Active Seregin, Alexey Titov, Burnasyan Federal Manufacturing Facility - 11320 Medical Biophysical Center; Elena Marc Dionne, Grant Ohland, AMEC Schelkanova, SevRAO Facility-1 (Russia); Geomatrix; Scott Goulart, Aerojet - a GenCorp Malgorzata K. Sneve, Norwegian Radiation Inc. (USA) Protection Authority (Norway) 9:00 Advanced Simulation Capability for 9:25 Risk Identification, Assessment and Environmental Management (ASCEM): Mitigation Plan for Environmental Early Site Demonstration - 11560 Remediation Activities at Brookhaven Juan Meza, Susan Hubbard, Lawrence National Laboratory - 11109 Berkeley National Laboratory; Mark Freshley, Steven Feinberg, Thomas Johnson, Melanie Ian Gorton, Pacific Northwest National Hurley Pearson, Dinesh Gupta, US DOE; Laboratory; David Moulton, Los Alamos Thomas Jernigan, Broohaven Science National Laboratory; Miles Denham, Savannah Associates (USA) River National Laboratory (USA) 9:50 Intrusive Characterization of the Hanford 9:25 Analysis of Modeling Capabilities to 618-10, Burial Ground Trenches - 11044 Predict Disposal Facility Cover Design and Darrin Faulk, John Darby, Washington Performance at DOE sites - 11057 Closure Hanford; Zane Walton, Vista Roneisha Worthy, James Clarke, Mark Engineering Technologies, LLC (USA) Abkowitz, Vanderbilt University; Craig Benson, 10:15 Break - Optional University of Washington (USA) 10:20 3-D Model Validation in Support of Site 9:50 Detection of Historical Pipeline Leak Closure, Material Disposal Area L, Los Plumes Using Non-intrusive, Surface Alamos, NM - 11545 Based Geophysical Techniques at the Kay Birdsell, Philip Stauffer, William Rice, Hanford Nuclear Site - 11571 Los Alamos National Laboratory (USA) James Fink, Marc Levitt, Dale Rucker, hydroGEOPHYSICS, Inc.; Marysia Skorska, 10:45 Nevada Test Site Environmental Washington River Protection Solutions, LLC Remediation Progress Toward Closure of (USA) Contaminated Sites - 11153 Robert Boehlecke, US DOE; Patrick 10:15 Break - Optional Matthews, Navarro Nevada Environmental 10:20 Fishbone, a Biogenic Apatite, for Services (USA) Sustainable Remediation of Uranium- 11:10 DOE-EM Small Site Update - 11500 Contaminated Water - 11534 John Unyong Moon, Mark Gilbertson, Justine Steven Larson, Christopher Griggs, John Alchowiak, Richard Schassburger, US DOE Ballard, USACE; Charles Waggoner, Mississippi (USA) State University (USA) 11:35 The Relocation of Waste Trench #54 at 10:45 Interim Barrier in Hanford's TY Farm to the Port Granby Waste Management Protect Groundwater - 11295 Facility - 11280 Danny Parker, Melissa Holm, Washington Thomas Smith, David Workman, Cameco River Protection Solutions; Robert Lober, US Corporation; Frank Barone, Golder Associates DOE; Colin Henderson, Columbia (Canada) Environmental and Engineering Services (USA) 11:10 Development of an Estimated Waste Session 31 Inventory for the 618-10 Burial Ground 8:30 AM - 12:00 PM Room 106A at the Hanford Site - 11119 Walter Josephson, WorleyParsons Polestar; Technical Innovations in Environmental John Ludowise, Washington Closure Hanford, Remediation and Site Closure LLC (USA)

Co-Chairs: Del Baird, CDM; Ed Alperin, Shaw Environmental & Infrastructure Group (USA) Lead Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Del Baird Add’l Organizer: Ed Alperin

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Session 32 11:35 Deposition Rates of the Polymeric Silicic Acid onto the Surface of Silicate Mineral 8:30 AM - 12:00 PM Room 106B in the Co-Presence of Ca Ions - 11378 Naoyuki Tamura, Yuichi Niibori, Hitoshi Models and Data - Supporting Performance of Mimura, Tohoku University (Japan) Geological Disposal Systems

Co-Chairs: Ming Zhang, Geological Survey of Japan, Session 33 AIST (Japan); Graham Fairhall, National Nuclear Laboratory (United Kingdom) 8:30 AM - 12:00 PM Room 106C Lead Organizer: Tjalle Vandergraaf Add’l Organizer(s): Ming Zhang, Simon Kwong, Separation in Support of Current Waste Andrew Martin Processing Operations Paper Reviewer: Andrew Martin 8:35 Multimodel Assessment of the Worth of Co-Chairs: Paul Bredt, Pacific Northwest National Data under Uncertainty - 11416 Laboratory; William Wilmarth, Savannah River Shlomo Neuman, Liang Xue, University of National Laboratory (USA) Arizona; Dan Lu, Ming Ye, Florida State Lead Organizer: Bernard Vigreux University (USA) Add’l Organizer: Robert Jubin 9:00 Development of Models to Forecast Paper Reviewer: Harry Babad Radionuclide Migration in the Geological Environment for Safety Cases of 8:35 Operations Review of the Savannah River RadWaste Repositories in the Russian Site Integrated Salt Disposition Process - Federation - 11269 11327 Sergey Utkin, Igor Linge, Leonid Bolshov, Thomas P. Peters, Fernando Fondeur, Ivan Kapyrin, Aleksandr Rastorguev, Yuri Michael Poirier, Savannah River National Vassilevski, Nuclear Safety Institute, RAS Laboratory; Steven J. Brown, Mark Geeting, (Russia) Savannah River Remediation, LLC; Samuel 9:25 Anomalous Transport in Fractured Fink, Savannah River Nuclear Solutions; (USA) Geologic Media: Basic Physical Models - 9:00 Small-Column Ion Exchange Testing of 11134 Spherical Resorcinol-Formaldehyde - Petr Kondratenko, Igor Linge, Olga 11379 Dvoretskaya, Leonid Bolshov, Leonid Matveev, Garrett Brown, Renee Russell, Reid Nuclear Safety Institute, RAS (Russia) Peterson, Pacific Northwest National 9:50 Non-Classical Transport in Fractal Media Laboratory (USA) as Applied to Radioactive Waste Problem: 9:25 Modeling Results from Cesium Ion Anisotropic Random Advection Model - Exchange Processing with Spherical 11147 Resins - 11228 Leonid Matveev, Petr Kondratenko, Leonid Charles Nash, Thong Hang, Sebastian Bolshov, Nuclear Safety Institute, RAS Aleman, Savannah River National Laboratory (Russia) (USA) 10:15 Break - Optional 9:50 Pilot Scale Testing of Continuous Sludge 10:20 Anomalous Transport in Heterogeneous Leaching Process and Near Tank Cesium Media with Sharply Contrasting Removal - 11377 Properties: The Role of Diffusive Barriers Reid Peterson, Rick Shimskey, Pacific - 11142 Northwest National Laboratory; David Petr Kondratenko, Olga Dvoretskaya, Leonid Blanchard, Battelle Pacific Northwest Division; Bolshov, Nuclear Safety Institute, RAS Roy Schepens, Collin Smith, Parsons (USA) (Russia) 10:15 Break - Optional 10:45 Transparency in the Selection of 10:20 Performance Improvement of Cross- Biosphere Transfer Parameters for Flowing Filtration for High Level Waste Geological Disposal Systems - 11515 Treatment - 11189 David Bytwerk, Kathryn Higley, Elizabeth Charles Nash, Mark Duignan, Michael Poirier, Houser, Oregon State University (USA) Savannah River National Laboratory; Caroline 11:10 Sorption of Tc (IV) to Cementitious Johnson, University of South Carolina (USA) Materials Associated with a Geological 10:45 Complex Microfiltration Behaviour of Disposal Facility for Radioactive Waste - Metal Hydroxide Slurries - 11376 11129 Reid Peterson, Philip Schonewill, Richard Nick Evans, Ricky Hallam, Sneh Jain, Daniel, Rick Shimskey, Pacific Northwest Loughborough University (United Kingdom) National Laboratory (USA)

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11:10 Partitioning and Conditioning Options Laboratory - 11334 Based on Chinese High-level Liquid Waste Alison Dorries, Scotty Jones, Steven Full Partitioning Process - 11440 Singledecker, Los Alamos National Laboratory; Xuegang Liu, Jingming Xu, Jing Chen, George Henckel, US DOE (USA) Jianchen Wang, Jin Chen, Shaowei LI, 11:10 The Power of Data Imaging - 11614 Tsinghua University (China) Jeffrey Lively, MACTEC (USA) 11:35 Small Column Ion Exchange Design and 11:35 Strategic Planning in the Office of Safety Strategy - 11325 Environmental Management - 11499 Thomas Huff, Maria Rios-Armstrong, Richard Michelle Primack, US DOE; David Meredith, Edwards, Savannah River Remediation, LLC; Project Enhancement Corporation; Kristine David Herman, Savannah River National Cornils, Demand Management Inc. (USA) Laboratory (USA)

Session 35 Session 34 8:30 AM - 12:00 PM Room 101C 8:30 AM - 12:00 PM Room 101B Packaging and Transportation of Radioactive Regulatory and Programmatic Issues and Material and Waste - Challenges and Lessons Solutions for LLW, ILW, and MW Learned

Co-Chairs: David Eaton, CH2M-WG Idaho, LLC; Co-Chairs: Ella McNeil, US DOE; Paul Jones, Gabriele Bandt, TÜV NORD EnSys Hannover DeNuke Contracting Services, Inc. (USA) (Germany) Lead Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Larry Harmon Lead Organizer and Paper Reviewer: David Eaton Add’l Organizer(s): Mike Nolan, Paul Jones Add’l Organizer(s): David Eaton, Gabriele Bandt

8:35 Practical Hazardous Material 8:35 Risk-Informing 10 CFR Part 61 - 11463 Transportation Costing, Scheduling and John Greeves, Jim Lieberman, Talisman Oversight with TCAT (Transportation International, LLC (USA) Costs Analysis Tool) - 11330 9:00 Mixed Low-Level Waste (LLW) Storage Dean Newton, Turnkey Transportation and Disposal at the Nevada Test Site Services (USA) (NTS) - 11082 9:00 Benefits of an Integrated Logistics Model Frank Disanza, US DOE; Patrick Arnold, for Radioactive and Nuclear Materials - Larry Holm, CH2M HILL, Inc.; John Wrapp, 11170 National Security Technologies, LLC (USA) Catherine Shelton, AREVA (USA) 9:25 The Impact of NRC Guidance on 9:25 Moab Uranium Mill Tailings Remedial Concentration Averaging on Low Level Action Project (UMTRA) - Assessment of Waste Sealed Source Disposal - 11424 Methods to Minimize Contaminated Julia Whitworth, William Stewart, Los Material Holdup in Intermodal Containers Alamos National Laboratory; Abigail - 11196 Cuthbertson, US DOE (USA) Lawrence M. Brede, EnergySolutions; Matt 9:50 The Achievements and the Challenges in Udovitsch, S & K Aerospace; Ken Wethington, Waste Management - Enhancing the US DOE (USA) Security and Safety in Radioactive 9:50 Characterization, Packaging, Material Transportation in Romania - Transportation, Treatment and Disposal 11273 of the Historic Argonne CP-5 Lower Inner Gheorghe Vieru, Institute for Nuclear Shield Plug - 11425 Research (Romania) Jeffrey Ginsburg, EnergySolutions; 10:15 Break - Optional Christopher Brandjes, Argonne National 10:20 Closure Optimization for the 92-Acre Area Laboratory; Bruce Cohen, Associated at the Nevada Test Site: Area 5 Container Sales & Fabrication (USA) Radioactive Waste Management Site - 10:15 Break - Optional 11151 10:20 Design, Fabrication, and Delivery of a John Wrapp, Vefa Yucel, Annette Primrose, Shielded Type A Container - 11512 National Security Technologies, LLC; Frank Robert Rittenberg, Cavanagh Services Disanza, US DOE (USA) Group, Inc. (USA) 10:45 Low-Level Radioactive Waste Management: Transitioning to Off-Site Disposal at Los Alamos National

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10:45 B&W Y-12 Beryllium Packaging of ARRA Anthony Banford, Darren Potter, Richard CERCLA Large Equipment for Bulk Jarvis, Leon Cordingley, National Nuclear Disposal - 11218 laboratory; Michael Grave, Doosan Babcock Joseph Birchfield, Link Technologies (USA) (United Kingdom) 11:10 Packaging and Transportation of 11:10 A Standardised Listing of Cost Items for Hazardous Materials for Disposition from Decommissioning Costing - 11483 the Argonne National Laboratory Building Vladimir Daniska, DECONTA (Slovak 330, Decommissioning - 11466 Republic); Michele Laraia, International Atomic Andy Riddick, Cavanagh Services Group, Energy Agency (Austria); Thomas Kirchner, Inc.; Lee Stevens, Argonne National European Commission Directorate General for Laboratory (USA) Energy (Switzerland); Patrick O'Sullivan, OECD Nuclear Energy Agency (France); Jan Carlsson, Swedish Nuclear Fuel and WM Co. Session 36 (Sweden) 8:30 AM - 12:00 PM Room 102A Session 37 D&D of Nuclear Power Plants 8:30 AM - 10:10 AM Room 103AB Co-Chairs: Maria Lindberg, Studsvik Nuclear AB (Sweden); Fred Sheil, Sheil Consulting, Ltd. (United Panel: Graduating Students and New Engineers Kingdom) - Wants and Needs - Are Companies Even Lead Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Maria Lindberg Listening? Add’l Organizer(s): Jas Devgun, Al Freitag Co-Chairs: Robert Berry, Foxfire Scientific Inc. (United Kingdom); Leonel Lagos, Florida 8:35 Harmonization of Decommissioning International University (USA) Approaches and Design Features - 11092 Lead Organizer: Robert Berry Jas Devgun, Sargent & Lundy, LLC (USA) Add’l Organizer(s): Leonel Lagos, Collin Donohoue 9:00 Decommissioning of the Reactor Pressure Panel Reporter: Leonel Lagos Vessel and its Peripheral Facilities of the Nuclear Power Plant in Stade, Germany - This panel will focus on new hires and graduating 11100 engineers having open lines of communication with Andreas Loeb, Dieter Stanke, Siempelkamp employers. Considering the projected shortfalls in the NIS GmbH (Germany) workforce, effective communication of wants and 9:25 Remote-Controlled Dismantling of the needs of both the employer and employee must Thermal Isolation and Preparations for exist. Currently, it seems that both sides must work the Primary Shielding Removal - 11279 harder to achieve this level of communication. With Anja Graf, Joachim Fleisch, Sylvia Winkler, this new approach, both sides can express their Stephan Wittenauer, WAK GmbH; Eiko wants and needs for a more satisfied workforce and a Koselowski, Stefan Klute, Siempelkamp better work environment. Nukleartechnik GmbH (Germany) 9:50 Activated Waste Activity Assessment Panelists include: Carl Dawson, NDA (United Based on Radioactive and Non- Kingdom); Kenny Krieger, Texas State Technical Radioactive Measurement: Generalized College; Desi Crouther, US DOE and Nadia Lima, Data Assimilation Method - 11135 Florida International University (USA). Bernard Poncet, EDF-CIDEN (France) 10:15 Break - Optional Session 38 10:20 Use of Cementitious Materials for SRS Reactor Facility In-Situ Decommissioning 10:15 AM - 12:00 PM Room 103AB - 11620 Christine Langton, David Stefanko, Panel: International Youth Nuclear Congress / Savannah River National Laboratory; John Young Professionals Blankenship, William Griffin, J.T. Long, Savannah River Nuclear Solutions; Justin Co-Chairs: Robert Berry, Foxfire Scientific Inc. Waymer, URS Corporation; David Matheny, (United Kingdom); Leonel Lagos, Florida South Carolina University; D. Singh, Argonne International University (USA) National Laboratory (USA) Lead Organizer and Panel Reporter: Corhyn Parr 10:45 Selection of Retrieval Techniques for Add’l Organizer(s): Robert Berry, Leonel Lagos Irradiated Graphite during Reactor Decommissioning - 11587

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This panel will focus on international activities of the A5. Cement Based Encapsulation Experiments Young Generation Network. These include the for Low-Radioactive Liquid Waste at Tokai International Youth Nuclear Congress attended by Reprocessing Plant - 11078 over 250 young professionals (to be held in the US in Atsushi Sugaya, Kenji Tanaka, Shigeru 2012), World Nuclear University (over 100 fellows Akutsu, Japan Atomic Energy Agency (Japan) per year) and national activities for young A6. Pilot-Scale System for Recycling Caustic professionals in the US, UK and France. We will share from LLW Simulant - 11342 the best practices of the different nations and Shekar Balagopal, Troy Dayton, Kean Duffey, international programmes to grow and develop the Sai Bhavaraju, Justin Pendleton, Ceramatec, international young professional network that aspires Inc. (USA) to be the next generation leaders of the future. A7. Pilot-Scale Testing of MST Mixing for the Panelists include: Michelle Swanson, North SRS Small Column Ion Exchange Process American Young Generation in Nuclear (NA-YGN) (SCIX) - 11224 (USA); Connor Deehan, President, UK Young Michael Poirier, Zafar Qureshi, Mike Restivo, Generation in Nuclear (UK-YGN) and International Tim Steeper, David Herman, Savannah River Youth Nuclear Congress (IYNC) Fellow (UK) and Dara National Laboratory (USA) Hrytzak-Lieffers, Manager – Corporate Social A8. Recent Developments in a Transformative Responsibility, Cameco Corporation (Canada). Technology for the Treatment of Nuclear Waste: Modular Vitrification System - Poster Session 39 11396 Gaetan Bonhomme, Mark Denton, Kurion, 8:30 AM - 12:00 PM 1st Floor Foyer Inc. (USA) A9. Decontamination of Pipes and Additional Posters: Equipment of the Oil and Gas Industry L/ILW, Mixed Waste, NORM & TENORM – A–E (NORM) in the Desert Region - 11268 Nuclear Power Plant Waste – F Frank Ambos, Conrad Gese, Tanja Boesing, sat.Kernterchnik GmbH (Germany) Topic A: LLW, ILW and Mixed Waste - Operating Experience A10. Low Temperature SiC Synthesis Route to Co-Chairs: Hans-Jürgen Steinmetz, Immobilize Irradiated Graphite Waste - Forschungszentrum Jülich GmbH; Andreas Roth, 11484 Westinghouse Electric Company (Germany) Mehul Chavda, Michael Ojovan, Shaowei Lead Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Roger Merrick Zhang, University of Sheffield (United Kingdom)

A1. Reduction of Uranium(VI) by a Consortium Topic B: Waste Characterization of LLW, ILW, from Limpopo Grown in Three Different MW, NORM and TENORM Carbon Sources - 11575 Co-Chairs: Bob Hiergesell, Savannah River National Simphiwe Chabalala, Evans Chirwa, Laboratory; Martin Letourneau, US DOE (USA) University of Pretoria (South Africa) Lead Organizer: Bob Hiergesell Paper Reviewer: Michael Davidson A2. Immobilization of BaSO4: Phases Formation and Microstructure of OPC- BaSO4 System Cured at an Elevated B1. Practical Issues for the Description of Temperature - 11012 Chemical Constituents in Radioactive Waste Oday Hussein, Michael Ojovan, Hajime Packages - 11556 Kinoshita, University of Sheffield (United Detlef Gründler, Wilma Boetsch, Claudia Kingdom) Haider, ISTec GmbH; Peter Brennecke,; Karin Kugel, Stefan Steyer, Federal Office for Radiation A3. Development and Testing of New Protection (Germany) Antimony Selective Media - 11183 Risto Harjula, Risto Koivula, Airi Paajanen, B2. Doubles Counting of Highly Multiplying Ilkka Välimaa, University of Helsinki; Esko Items in Reflective Surroundings - 11548 Tusa, Miia Pehkonen, Roger Kvarnström, Stephen Croft, Louise Evans, M.A. Schear, Fortum Power and Heat (Finland) Stephen J. Tobin, Los Alamos National Laboratory (USA) A4. Application of Bacteria to Remove Americium from Radioactive Liquid Waste B3. Separation of Uranium by Ion-Exchange - 11130 Chromatography for Determination of Júlio Takehiro Marumo, Tânia Regina Borba, its Content and Isotopic Composition Using Solange Kazumi Sakata,; Rafael Vicente de ICP-MS - 11126 Pádua Ferreira, Maria Helena Bellini, Nuclear Minh Hong Le, Chien Nguyen, Huynh Van and Energy Research Institute (Brazil); Debora Trung, ITRRE (Vietnam) Frigi Rodrigues, University of Houston (USA)

47 Tuesday AM

B4. Natural Radioactivity in Common Building LLRW - 11622 Materials Used in Vietnam - 11255 Lloyd Solomon, Robert Eunice, Amit Gandhi, Sieu Le, Dalat Nuclear Research Institute Studsvik, Inc. (USA) (Vietnam) D5. Launderable vs. Disposable Protective B5. Modeling the Effect of Hydrogeochemical Clothing, a Comparative Ecology Centered Evolution on Concrete Degradation in the Life Cycle Inventory - 11623 Proposed LLW Disposal Site of Taiwan Marie BenKinney, Exponent; Michael Fuller, - 11253 Unitech Services Group, Inc (USA) Wen-Sheng Lin, Chen-Wuing Liu, National D6. Central Radioactive Waste Processing and Taiwan University; Ming-Hsu Li, National Central Storage Facility at Atomic Energy Research University (Taiwan) Establishment, Savar Dhaka, Bangladesh - B6. Field-Scale Experiment for Gas Generation 11624 in Korean Repository - 11124 Fazlul Karim, World University of Bangladesh Juyoul Kim, Suk Hoon Kim, FNC Technology (Bangladesh) Co., Ltd; Jin Beak Park, Sunjoung Lee, Korea Radioactive Waste Management Corp. (Republic Topic E: NORM, TENORM and Other Uranium of Korea) Issues Co-Chairs: Steven Brown, SHB Inc.; Erich Tiepel, Topic C: LLW/ILW Performance Assessment Golder Associates, Inc (USA) Co-Chairs: Bob Hiergesell, Savannah River National Lead Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Steven Brown Laboratory; Martin Letourneau, US DOE (USA) Lead Organizer: Bob Hiergesell E1. Biocorrosion of Cemented Radioactive Paper Reviewer: Robert Jubin Waste - 11156 Olga Gorbunova, Alexandr Barinov, SIA Radon C1. Code-to-Code Benchmarking of the Porflow Institute (Russia) and GoldSim Contaminant Transport Models E2. Mechanism of Uranite Reduction Involving Using a Simple 1-D Domain - 11191 the Microbial Cellular Cytochrome c3 and Bob Hiergesell, Savannah River National NADH-DH Holoenzymes - 11576 Laboratory (USA) Evans Chirwa, Simphiwe Chabalala, University C2. Engineering Properties, Hydraulic Behavior of Pretoria (South Africa) and Theoretical Modelling of Nuclear Waste E3. The Environmental Conditions and Heals of Flows - 11098 Workers at the Russian Uranium Mining and Timothy Hunter, Michael Fairweather, James Milling Facility - 11525 Young, Jeff Peakall, Simon Biggs, Jun Yao, David Evgeny Metlyaev, Sergey Kiselev, Mikhail Harbottle, University of Leeds (United Kingdom) Alekseev, Alexey Titov, Natalia K. Shandala, Burnasyan Federal Medical Biophysical Centre Topic D: Overall/Programmatic LLW Topics (Russia) Co-Chairs: Mike Eisenhower, Materials & Energy Corporation; Loong Yong, Spectra Tech, Inc. (USA) Topic F: Nuclear Power Plant (NPP) Waste Lead Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Edward Bentz Management Co-Chairs: Mark Lewis, EnergySolutions; Jay D1. Application of NPL Radioactive Waste Maisler, Enercon Services, Inc (USA) Package Standards at AWE - 11004 Lead Organizer: Wolfgang Steinwarz Timothy Miller, AWE (United Kingdom) Paper Reviewer: C. Clint Miller D2. Pollution Prevention Benefits of Non- Hazardous-Shielding Glovebox Gloves F1. Evaluation of Radiochemical Properties of - 11000 Legacy Dry Active Waste - 11477 Michael Cournoyer, Robert Dodge, Los Alamos Kidoo Kang, Youngju Lee, Hyun-jun Jo, Korea National Laboratory (USA) Hydro and Nuclear Power Co., Ltd. (Republic of D3. Development of Safety Enhanced Protection Korea) Units for Tritium - 11165 F2. Burnup Credit Measurements for Cask Sung Paal Yim, Byung-Gil Ahn, Hyung-Kyoo Loading Compliance – A Review of Kim, Hoan Sung Jung, In-Cheol Lim, Korea Techniques and Calibration Philosophies - Atomic Energy Research Institute; Cheo Kyung 11194 Lee, Handong Global University; Sun Kyun Yoo, Alan Simpson, Martin Clapham, Pajarito Joongbu University (Republic of Korea) Scientific Corporation; Andrew Chesterman, D4. Innovative use of Cloud Computing and Babcock International Group (United Kingdom) Hardware Platforms to Improve the Accuracy, Efficiency and Auditability of

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F3. Dry Cask Storage Safely Moving Spent and Donald Bridges, Chairman, Citizens Advisory Nuclear Fuel - 11169 Board, Savannah River Site. Jay Edmundson, David Schaeffer, Konecranes Nuclear Equipment & Services (USA) Session 41 F4. Environmental Treatment of LLW and ILW 1:30 PM - 3:15 PM Room 103AB at Almirante Álvaro Alberto Nuclear Power Station: A Proposal for a Waste Models and Data - Supporting Performance Management Politics (Electronuclear; Assessment of Geological Disposal Systems Brazil) - 11150 Sandra Cecília Miano, Rogério Arcuri Filho, M.Sc., Bertino do Carmo Lima Neto, Eletrobrás Co-Chairs: Simon Kwong National Nuclear Eletronuclear S.A. (Brazil) Laboratory; Ming Zhang, Geological Survey of F5. Calculations of Flow in Evaporator with Japan, AIST (Japan) Solids Present at The Base - 11539 Lead Organizer: Tjalle Vandergraaf Simon Kwong, Keith Miller, Steve Graham, Add’l Organizer(s): Ming Zhang, Andrew Martin National Nuclear Laboratory (United Kingdom) Paper Reviewer: Andrew Martin

1:35 Decision Support, Risk Management and March 1, Tuesday PM Tradeoff Analysis of Stakeholder Estimation: Application of Cyber Security Econometrics System (CSES) to Decision Session 40 Support and Risk Management for Waste 1:30 PM - 5:00 PM Room 102B Management - 11340 Robert Abercrombie, Frederick Sheldon, Oak Panel: US Featured Site: DOE - Savannah River - Ridge National Laboratory (USA) Accomplishments and Challenges 2:00 GoldSim's Dynamic-Link Library (DLL) Interface for Cementitious Barriers Co-Chairs: Dave Moody, US DOE; Jack Craig, US Partnership (CBP) - 11444 DOE - EM (USA) Kevin Brown, Vanderbilt University; Frank Lead Organizer and Panel Reporter: Dawn Haygood Smith, Greg Flach, Savannah River National Add’l Organizer(s): W.T. (Sonny) Goldston, Ned Laboratory (USA) Bibler 2:25 Cementitious Barriers Partnership (CBP), Phase 1: Code Integration - 11446 This panel focuses on the DOE Savannah River Site Kevin Brown, Sohini Sarkar, Vanderbilt located in Aiken, SC. It will showcase recent progress University; Greg Flach, Frank Smith, Savannah and planned efforts in radioactive waste River National Laboratory (USA) management, waste disposition, environmental remediation, D&D and ground water protection. The session will begin with an introduction and Session 42 update on progress and perspectives of SRS as a 3:15 PM - 5:00 PM Room 103AB long-term national asset from DOE senior management. SRS’s primary contractors, the Savannah River National Laboratory (SRNL) and the Panel: Contract Management Issues Related to SRS Citizens Advisory Board will introduce their Insurance, Indemnity and Bonds in the WM specific role at SRS, highlight progress and discuss Industry technologies that are assisting with the cleanup and waste management activities at the site. Panel Co-Chairs: John Coffman, DeNuke Contracting discussion will also highlight future contributions of Services, Inc.; Jim Gilley, Wells Fargo Energy and SRS as it serves as the gateway for nationwide Environmental (USA) nuclear materials consolidation and ultimate Lead Organizer: John Coffman disposition. Add’l Organizer and Panel Reporter: Jim Gilley

Panelists include: Dave Moody, Manager DOE - The focus of this panel session will be to provide Savannah River Operations Office, US DOE; Dave attendees with an up-to-date analysis of market Olson, Deputy Project Manager, Savannah River conditions and policy forms, necessary modifications Remediation, LLC; Mark Breor, Vice President and to wrap the financial and insurance protection around Project Manager, Parsons Salt Waste Processing the project, contractual and operational risks and a Facility; Garry Flowers, President and CEO, discussion on project and facility bonding. The risks Savannah River Nuclear Solutions; Terry Michalske, assumed by companies working in this business Director, SRNL; Kelly Trice, President/Chief sector are unlike those faced by any other industry. Operating Officer, Shaw AREVA MOX Services, LLC

49 Tuesday PM

A keen understanding of risk transfer solutions and William Biloski, James Serafin Jr., Oak Ridge possible contract negotiations is vital to all companies National Laboratory (USA) working in this business sector. The following topics 3:15 Break - Optional will be covered in this session. 3:20 What is the Impact of Poor Definition of Boundaries and Interfaces on Projects, 1. Overview of the Current Insurance Status of the and What, If Anything, Should be Done? - Insurance and Surety Bond Market 11471 2. An Understanding of the Underwriting Process – Richard Peters, Project Time & Cost “From Rejection to Acceptance” International Ltd (United Kingdom) 3. Professional & Contractors Pollution Legal Liability 4. Site Pollution Legal Liability 3:45 Project Management: Managing a 5. Contract Surety – Bid, Performance and Payment Performance Network of Agreements and Bonds Deliverables - 11251 6. Financial Assurance for Radiological Waste Laurie Ford, Critical Path Consultants (USA) Processing 4:10 Making Sustainability Relevant through 7. Contract Rules of Engagement for Insurance and Exploration of Land Reuse Options: The Bonds Oak Ridge Energy Corridor Example - 8. “Decisions Involve Risks” 11328 Sharon Robinson, Oak Ridge National Panelists include: Jim Gilley, Senior Vice President Laboratory; Susan Cange, US DOE; Gary – Energy & Environmental, Wells Fargo Insurance Gilmartin, Gilmartin Engineering Works (USA) Services; Glynis Preister, National Environmental 4:35 Managing Engineering Activities for the Practice Manager, Wells Faro Insurance Services; Plateau Remediation Contract – Hanford - Bob Patterson, Regional Manager, Berkley Specialty 11580 Underwriting Managers and a representative from Charles Kronvall, CH2M HILL PRC; Gary American Nuclear Insurers. Cannell, Fluor Enterprises, Inc. (USA)

Session 43 Session 44 1:30 PM - 5:00 PM Room 102A 1:30 PM - 5:00 PM Room 101C Project Management Improvements - Planning through Completion - Scope, Cost & Schedule Enhancements in Vitrification Technology Control Co-Chairs: Gordon Crawford, EnergySolutions; Co-Chairs: Christopher Timm, PECOS Management Christian Ladirat, CEA (France) Services, Inc.; Gerald Williams, Enercon Services, Lead Organizer: Ned Bibler Inc. (USA) Add’l Organizer(s): Gordon Crawford, Leslie Lead Organizer/Paper Reviewer: Christopher Timm Jardine Add’l Organizer(s): Neil Davis, Gerald Williams Paper Reviewer: Gordon Crawford

1:35 Improving the National Nuclear Laboratory 1:35 Advanced Joule-Heated Melter Design to Project Management Capability - 11017 Reduce Hanford WTP Operating Costs - Tim Tinsley, Nick Hanigan, National Nuclear 11131 Laboratory (United Kingdom) Eric Smith, Theresa Butler, Bradley Bowan, Boris Ciorneiu, EnergySolutions; Keith Matlack, 2:00 Project Management Lessons Learned on Ian Pegg, Catholic University of America (USA) US DOE Projects - 11468 Mark Frei, Jim Burritt, Longenecker & Associates (USA) 2:00 Process Enhancements to Improve Overall throughput in the Defense Waste 2:25 Integrated Planning: Consolidating Annual Processing Facility at the Savannah River Facility Planning — More Time for Site - 11458 Execution - 11562 Jonathan Bricker, Terri Fellinger, Robert Jerel Nelson, R. Lee Morton, Carlos Ramirez, Hopkins, Dale Hutsell, Savannah River Carlos Castillo, WorleyParsons Polestar; James Remediation, LLC; Michael Stone, Brad McSwain, Terragraphics; Patrick Morris, Pickenheim, David Peeler, Erich Hansen, National Security Technologies, LLC (USA) Savannah River National Laboratory; Ian Pegg, 2:50 Integration for Success of Revitalization, Marek Brandys, Robert Mohr, Wing Kot, The Redevelopment, Remedial Activities and Catholic University of America; Glenn Diener, D&D at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory Innocent Joseph, Holly Pasieka, - 11212 EnergySolutions (USA)

50 Tuesday PM

2:25 Installation of Bubblers in the Savannah 1:35 The Operational Importance of River Site Defense Waste Processing Radiological Improvement in Remote Facility Melter - 11136 Handled Transuranic Waste Processing at Michael Smith, Dan Iverson, Savannah River the Idaho Clean-up Project. - 11055 Remediation, LLC (USA) Scott Anderson, Tammy Hobbes, Gary Lusk, 2:50 Successful Hot Operation of the German CH2M-WG Idaho, LLC; Alan Jines, William Vitrification Plant VEK – Results and Lattin, Edward Ziemianski, US DOE (USA) Experiences - 11277 2:00 Customer Service Model for Waste Joachim Fleisch, Franz-Josef Schmitz, WAK Tracking at Los Alamos National GmbH; Wolfgang Gruenewald, Guenther Roth, Laboratory - 11329 Winfried Tobie, FZK GmbH (Germany); Alison Dorries, Andrew Ashbaugh, Andrew 3:15 Break - Optional Montoya, Los Alamos National Laboratory (USA) 3:20 Glass Formulation for Next Generation 2:25 Managing Hanford’s Legacy, No-Path- Cold Crucible Induction Melter - 11561 Forward Waste to Disposition - 11445 John Vienna, Dong-Sang Kim, Pacific Ty Blackford, Renee Catlow, Linda Maiden, Northwest National Laboratory; Michael Lori West, Don Flyckt, CH2M HILL PRC; Don Schweiger, Battelle Pacific Northwest Division; Moak, Richard Grondin, Perma-Fix Fabienne Johnson, James Marra, David Peeler, Environmental Services, Inc.; Mike Waters, Savannah River National Laboratory; Gary Cavanagh Services Group, Inc. (USA) Smith, US DOE (USA) 2:50 Project Strategy for the Remediation and 3:45 A Milestone in Vitrification: The Disposition of Legacy Transuranic Waste at Replacement of a Hot Metallic Melter with the Savannah River Site - 11232 a Cold Crucible Induction Melter in a Hot Mary Rodriguez, Savannah River Nuclear Cell in Record Time at the La Hague Plant, Solutions (USA) France - 11482 3:15 Break - Optional Eric Chauvin, Sandrine Naline, Fabrice 3:20 Alpha Gamma Hot Cell Facility De- Leprevost, Eric Prudhon, AREVA; Benoit Inventory, a Tale of Two Projects - 11316 Carpentier, SGN Equeurdreville (France) Daniel Pancake, Michael Sodaro, ANL (USA) 4:10 Limited Increase of Particle Entrainment in 3:45 Lessons Learned in the De-Inventory the Off-Gas System of a Cold Crucible Process for the Alpha Gamma Hot Cell Induction Melter Compared with a Joule- Facility at Argonne National Laboratory Heated Metal Melter for HLLW Vitrification - 11115 - 11465 Janie Johnston, Argonne National Laboratory Philippe Gruber, Eric Tronche, Alain Ledoux, (USA) Virginie Labe, Jean Francois Hollebecque, J. Lacombe, Christian Ladirat, CEA; Sandrine 4:10 A Proposed Systems Logic Approach for Naline, AREVA (France) Meeting a Demanding Shipment Schedule for Contact Handled Transuranic Waste 4:35 Vitrification of Molybdenum Rich High - 11650 Level Solutions by the Cold Crucible Melter Kathleen Leonard, Portage, Inc.; Jeff Walkley, Process - 11502 Bechtel (USA) Philippe Gruber, Olivier Pinet, Frederic Angeli, Jean Francois Hollebecque, CEA; Sandrine Naline, AREVA (France) Session 46 1:30 PM - 3:10 PM Room 104AB Session 45 Panel: Nuclear Power Plant Waste Management 1:30 PM - 5:00 PM Room 101B - LLW Disposal Issues

Operational Efficiency in TRU Waste Co-Chairs: C. Clint Miller, Pacific Gas & Electric; Management Mark Carver, Entergy Services, Inc. (USA) Lead Organizer and Panel Reporter: C. Clint Miller Co-Chairs: Terry Wickland, Nuclear Filter Add’l Organizer: Mark Lewis Technology; Betty Humphrey, Weston Solutions, Inc. (USA) This panel will focus on US waste disposal. It Lead Organizer: Roger Nelson provides the opportunity for representatives of US Add’l Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Terry commercial LLW disposal facilities to update Wickland managers of radioactive waste at nuclear power plants on disposal site access and services provided. The status of a proposed new site will also be presented.

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Panelists include: Jeff Gardner, Site Vice Heather Burns, Savannah River Nuclear President, Clive Disposal Site, EnergySolutions; Bill Solutions; Greg Flach, Christine Langton, Dornsife, Vice President Regulatory Affairs, Waste Savannah River National Laboratory; David Control Specialists; Mark Carver, Manager, Fleet Kosson, Kevin Brown, Vanderbilt University; LLW, Entergy Services; Lisa Edwards, Radwaste Linda Suttora, Pramod Mallick, US DOE; David Program Manager, EPRI; and Bill House, Vice Esh, Jacob Philip, US NRC; Edward Garboczi, President, Chem-Nuclear (USA). National Institute of Standards Technology (USA); Eric Samson, SIMCO Technologies, Inc. (Canada); H. Van Der Sloot, JCL Meeussen, Session 47 Energy Research Centre of the Netherlands 3:15 PM - 5:00 PM Room 104AB (The Netherlands) 2:25 Impact of Recovery Act Funding on Waste Panel: Nuclear Power Plant Waste Management Disposal Operations at the Nevada Test - LLW Processor Issues Site - 11120 Jhon Carilli, US DOE; Rick Wagner, Katie Co-Chairs: Mark Lewis, EnergySolutions; Mark Tanaka, John Wrapp, Sydney Gordon, National Carver, Entergy Services, Inc. (USA) Security Technologies, LLC (USA) Lead Organizer and Panel Reporter: Mark Lewis 2:50 Intentional Mixing of Special Nuclear Materials to meet Waste Acceptance This panel will focus on US waste processors and Criteria - 11387 provides the opportunity for representatives of US Heath Downey, MACTEC; John Conant, ABB fixed-based processing facilities to update managers Inc. (USA) of radioactive waste at nuclear power plants, on service and facility changes and improvements. Fixed-based processing facilities Session 49 provide a variety of waste volume reduction, 3:15 PM - 5:00 PM Room 105C treatment, and disposal services to help nuclear power waste generators to cost effectively and efficiently disposition low-level radioactive waste Pollution Prevention/Waste Minimization for within commercially regulated guidelines. Processors LLW, ILW, MW, NORM and TENORM are continuously changing and improving on services, which necessitate periodic updates to stay abreast. Co-Chairs: John Briest, Weaver Boos Consultants LLC; Mike Eisenhower, Materials & Energy Corporation (USA) Panelists include: Sylvain Saint-Pierre, Director, Lead Organizer: Gabriele Bandt WNA; Brian Wood, VP, LP&D, EnergySolutions; Add’l Organizer(s): Holger Spann, Lance Mezga John Hagan, Sales Manager, Perma-Fix Services; Paper Reviewer: Holger Spann Greg Broda, VP, Impact Services and Lloyd Solomon, COO Studsvik (USA). 3:20 Minimizing Risks to the Environment from using NORM Residues in Road Construction Session 48 - 11076 1:30 PM - 3:15 PM Room 105C Júlio Takehiro Marumo, Vanusa Maria Jacomino, Paulo Heilbron, Fabiana Dias, Maria Waste Certification, Acceptance and Disposal Helena Taddei, Comissã o Nacional de Energia for LLW, ILW and Special Nuclear Material Nuclear (Brazil) 3:45 Effect of Concentration of Hydrogen Co-Chairs: Heinz Kroeger, TÜV NORD EnSys Chloride Gas on Chlorination Treatment of Hannover (Germany); Richard Krett, DeNuke Waste Antimony-Uranium Composite Oxide Contracting Services, Inc. (USA) Catalyst - 11274 Lead Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Heinz Kroeger Kayo Sawada, Youichi Enokida, Nagoya University (Japan) 4:10 Study of the Treatment of the Liquid 1:35 Development, Qualification and Disposal of Radioactive Waste Nong Son Uranium Ore an Alternative Immobilized Low-Activity Processing - 11204 Waste Form at the Hanford Site - 11031 Tien Nguyen, Institute for Technology of James Edge, Terry Sams, Rebecca Robbins, Radioactive and Rare Elements (Vietnam); David Swanberg, Washington River Protection Laura Harvey, UT-Battelle (USA) Solutions (USA) 4:35 Development of an Integrated Radioactive 2:00 Cementitous Barriers Partnership Waste Management and Environmental Accomplishments and Relevance to the US Surveillance Program at Dalat Nuclear DOE Complex - 11443

52 Tuesday PM

Research Institute - 11166 Clapham, Pajarito Scientific Corporation; Dien Nguyen, Phuong Tran, Nuclear Research Kathleen Gruetzmacher, John Veilleux, Los Institute (Vietnam); Harvey Laura Kay, Joan F. Alamos National Laboratory (USA) Hughes, Oak Ridge National Laboratory (USA) 3:45 A Comparison of Measurement Uncertainty for the Case of Non-Uniform Source Distribution Between Rotating Boxes and Session 50 Stationary Boxes with Multiple Detector 1:30 PM - 3:15 PM Room 106A Locations - 11182 Henrik Jäderström, Canberra Solutions AB Waste Characterization for LLW, ILW, MW - (Sweden); Frazier Bronson, Canberra Non-Measurement Topics Industries, Inc. (USA) 4:10 Efficiency Optimization Employing Random Co-Chairs: David Eaton, CH2M-WG Idaho, LLC; and Smart Search using Multiple Counts Heinz Kroeger, TÜV NORD EnSys Hannover and Line Activity Consistency Benchmarks (Germany) - 11398 Lead Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Heinz Kroeger Andrey Bosko, Nabil Menaa, Wilhelm Mueller, Add’l Organizer: Frazier Bronson Frazier Bronson, Ram Venkataraman, William R. Russ, Canberra Industries, Inc.; Tim Spillane, Schlumberger Labs (USA); Vladimir Nizhnik, 1:35 An Alternate Approach to Justifying IAEA (Austria) Iodine-129 Concentration Values During Assessments for Decommissioning 4:35 A New Segmented Gamma Scanner System Evaluations and for Waste Profiles - 11216 - 11366 A. Joseph Nardi, Dustin Miller, ENERCON Dante Nakazawa, Michael Field, Bruce Services, Inc. (USA) Gillespie, R. Mowry, Sasha Philips, Art Radomski, Haori Yang, Canberra Industries, 2:00 Acceleration of B&W Y-12 ARRA Project: Inc. (USA) Characterization and Disposition Mapping  Strategies - 11209 Joseph Birchfield, Link Technologies (USA) Session 52 2:25 Evaluation of Uncertainties of Radiological 1:30 PM - 5:00 PM Room 105B Characteristics by Means of a Mix of Deterministic and Probabilistic Approaches Accelerated Deactivation and Decommissioning - 11025 of Facilities Timothy Soetens, Sophie Cauchies, Saïd Ben Ayad, ONDRAF/NIRAS (Belgium) Co-Chairs: Jas Devgun, Sargent & Lundy, LLC; 2:50 A Scaling Factor Estimation Program for Philippe Guiberteau, CEA Nuclear Energy Low-Level Radioactive Waste - 11427 Directorate (France) Taewook Kim, Nara Lee, Sung Jun Maeng, Lead Organizer: Maria Lindberg Korea Hydro & Nuclear Engineering Institute Add’l Organizer(s): Jas Devgun, Andrew Szilagyi (Republic of Korea) Paper Reviewer: Jas Devgun

Session 51 1:35 Review of EHS&Q Across Decommissioning 3:15 PM - 5:00 PM Room 106A at Sellafield and Overview of the Effective Management of Radiation Dose within Decommissioning at Sellafield - 11294 Waste Characterization for ILW, LLW, HLW - Jack Williamson, Sellafield Ltd (United Ionizing Radiation Measurement Methods Kingdom) 2:00 Signature Research on Legacy Co-Chairs: Frazier Bronson, Canberra Industries, Management and Decommissioning at the Inc.; Stephen Croft, Los Alamos National Laboratory National Nuclear Laboratory, United (USA) Kingdom - 11588 Lead Organizer: Heinz Kroeger Anthony Banford, Daniel Mathers, Darren Add’l Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Frazier Potter, National Nuclear Laboratory (United Bronson Kingdom) 2:25 The DIAMOND University Consortium: 3:20 Application of Spectral Summing to Decommissioning, Immobilisation and Indeterminate Suspect Low-Level Drums Management of Nuclear Waste for Disposal at Los Alamos National Laboratory - 11249 - 11097 Randy Lucero, James Seamans, Martin James Young, Michael Fairweather, Simon

53 Tuesday PM

Biggs, University of Leeds; Nick Evans, 3:15 Break - Optional Loughborough University; William Lee, Imperial 3:20 Remediation Issues and Solutions with Co- College London (United Kingdom) Located Chemical and Radiological 2:50 Safe and Compliant approach to First-of-a- Contaminants - 11296 Kind Demolition at the Hanford Site - 11434 Eugene Shephard, Peter Collopy, Nelson Kurt Kehler, CH2M HILL PRC (USA) Walter, Heath Downey, MACTEC; Elaine 3:15 Break - Optional Hammick, ABB Inc. (USA) 3:20 Irradiated Graphite Waste Treatment 3:45 Savannah River Site - Incorporating Risk - 11174 and Land Use into Site "Area Completion" Gerard Laurent, Electricite de France (France) Remedial Decisions - 11409 Karen Guevara, US DOE; Dena Brett, 3:45 A Technical Basis for the Selection of Area Savannah River Nuclear Solutions (USA) vs. Volume Criteria for Contaminated Structures - 11003 4:10 Decision Framework for Applying A. Joseph Nardi, Todd S Brautigam, ENERCON Attenuation Processes to Metals and Services, Inc. (USA) Radionuclides - 11234 Carl Spreng, Colorado Department of Public 4:10 Immobilization of Cesium Traps from the Health and Environment; Dibakar (Dib) BN-350 Fast Reactor (Aktau, Kazakhstan) - Goswami, Washington State Department of 11062 Ecology (USA) David Wells, Andrew Herrick, Nuvia Limited (United Kingdom); Collin J Knight, John 4:35 Establishing Final Action Cleanup Decisions Michelbacher, Idaho National Laboratory (USA); for the Hanford Site River Corridor - 11592 Viktor Mayev, Andrey Rovneiko, MAEC- Jeff Lerch, Washington Closure Hanford; Kazatomprom; Oleg Romanenko, I.L. Nicholas Ceto III, US DOE (USA) Tazhibaeva, Igor Yakovlev, Nuclear Technology Safety Center (Kazakhstan) Session 54 1:30 PM - 5:00 PM Room 106C Session 53 1:30 PM - 5:00 PM Room 106B Visitor Centers and Other Public-Education Tools ER Pre-Closure Challenges - Using Risk Data and Considering Future Land Use Co-Chairs: Judith Connell, Fluor Government Group; Helen Belencan, US DOE (USA) Lead Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Judith Connell Co-Chairs: Moses Jaraysi, CH2M HILL PRC; Matt Add’l Organizer(s): Elizabeth Bowers, Helen McCormick, US DOE (USA) Belencan Lead Organizer: Angie Jones Add’l Organizer(s): Moses Jaraysi, Matt McCormick 1:35 PSEG’s Energy & Environmental Resource Paper Reviewer: Moses Jaraysi Center: The Next Generation of Energy Education Centers - 11083 Lisa Barile, PSEG Power, LLC (USA) 1:35 The Role of Future Land Use in Environmental Decision Making at Three 2:00 The Weldon Spring Site Interpretive DOE Mega-Cleanup Sites: Rocky Flats, Center: Lessons Learned from the First Ten Mound and Fernald - 11595 Years - 11338 Marc Jewett, Fluor Government Group; Moses Jane Powell, Vijendra Kothari, US DOE; Jaraysi, CH2M HILL PRC (USA) Yvonne Deyo, Melissa Lutz, S.M. Stoller Corporation (USA) 2:00 Hanford Site Central Plateau Cleanup Completion Strategy: Mapping the Path to 2:25 Hanford’s Public Tour Program – An Efficient and Effective Cleanup - 11456 Excellent Educational Tool - 11439 Dale McKenney, CH2M HILL PRC (USA) Karen Sinclair, Mission Support Alliance, LLC (USA) 2:25 New Science and Newer Risk Assessment Policy: Updates to the U.S. EPA Superfund 2:50 Regional Stakeholder Education Through Risk and Dose Assessment Models - 11570 the Nuclear Workforce Initiative - 11101 Stuart Walker, US EPA (USA) Mindy Mets, Savannah River Site (USA) 2:50 Balancing Cleanup and Future Land Use at 3:15 Break - Optional the Idaho National Laboratory - 11186 3:20 Nuclear Energy & Radioactive Waste: The David Hutchison, Frank Webber, CH2M-WG Perception of the Youngsters; A Study Idaho, LLC (USA) Through the Educational Workshops

54 Tuesday PM

Conducted by the "Visiatome" Information Monitoring in Vietnam: Present and Future - Center at the CEA Marcoule (France) - 11315 11530 Giap Trinh, Long Nguyen, Phan Ngo, Institute Cedric Garnier, CEA (France) for Nuclear Science and Technology (Vietnam) 3:45 Special Feature Presentation: Oak Ridge - A6. Some Considerations on Water-to-Fish History, Heart & Hope, Part 1.- 11326 Transfer Data Collected in Japan for Jenny Freeman, Strata-G; John R. Radionuclides and Stable Elements - 11252 Eschenberg, US DOE; Cathy Hickey, URS Keiko Tagami, Shigeo Uchida, National Corporation (USA) Institute of Radiological Sciences (Japan) 4:10 Special Feature Presentation: Oak Ridge - A7. Environmental Radiation Background in the History, Heart & Hope, Part 2. - 11158 Hanoi Area and Some Information for Ray Smith, Y-12 National Security Complex Authority Management - 11123 (USA) Long Nguyen, Institute for Nuclear Science and 4:35 The National Museum of Nuclear Science & Technology (Vietnam) History; Statistics, Issues, Successes After Year Number Two of Operation as a Public Topic B: Assessment, Planning and Interaction Option - 11048 Implementation of Project Remediation Jim Walther, National Museum of Nuclear Activities Science & History (USA) Co-Chairs: David Wallace, CDM; Vickie Maranville, AMEC Earth & Environmental, Inc. (USA) Lead Organizer: David Wallace Poster Session 55 Paper Reviewer: Vickie Maranville 1:30 PM - 5:00 PM 1st Floor Foyer B1. Environmental Restoration of Corrective Posters: Environmental Remediation – A-D Action Unit 408 Bomblet Target Area at Communications & Education – E Tonopah Test Site, Nevada (ARRA Funded) - Security, Safety & Safeguards – F 11114 Kevin Cabble, US DOE; Mark Krauss, S.M. Topic A: Fisson Products, Actinide Monitoring Stoller Corporation; Mark Burmeister, National and Remediation Nuclear Energy Series (USA) B2. Conceptual Model for Hanford 242-Z Area Co-Chairs: Susan Walter, AECOM; Scott Warner, Soil Disposal Sites and the Hanford Soil AMEC (USA) Inventory Model (SIM) - 11565 Lead Organizer: Susan Walter Stephen Agnew, Columbia Energy & Paper Reviewer: Scott Warner Environmental Services, Inc.; Sunil Mehta, INTERA (USA) B3. Determining Corrective Action Boundaries A1. Uranium Toxicity to Native Microbial at Nevada Test Site Aerially-Dispersed Communities in the Hanford 300 Area Radiological Release Sites - 11155 Groundwater - 11345 Lynn Kidman, S.M. Stoller Corporation; Patrick Denny Carvajal, Florida International Matthews, Navarro Nevada Environmental University; Andrew A. Plymale, Allan Konopka, Services; Kevin Cabble, US DOE (USA) Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (USA) B4. ERDF Supercells 9 & 10: A Case A2. Biological Immobilization of Dissolved Study/Comparison in Constructability and Uranium - 11578 Cost Reduction through Re-Design - 11324 Seung Yeop Lee, Min-Hoon Baik, Jong Won John Briest, Weaver Boos Consultants LLC; Choi, Korea Atomic Energy Research Institute William Borlaug, Washington Closure Hanford, (Republic of Korea) LLC (USA) A3. Analysis of Environmental Radioactivity Monitoring around Korean LILW Disposal Facility - 11492 Topic C: Emerging Approaches to Wastewater Juyoul Kim, FNC Technology Co., Ltd; Treatment and Reducing Greenhouse Gas Seungyoung Jeong, Korea Institute of Nuclear Emissions Safety (Republic of Korea) Co-Chairs: Angie Jones, AMEC Earth & Environmental; Srini Neralla, PIKA International, A4. Transfer of Zirconium, Niobium and Inc. (USA) Molybdenum from Soil to Edible Parts of Lead Organizer: Angie Jones Crops - 11254 Paper Reviewer: Srini Neralla Shigeo Uchida, Keiko Tagami, National Institute of Radiological Sciences (Japan) A5. Status of Environmental Radiation

55 Tuesday PM

C1. Distillation: Waste-Water Treatment for Topic E: Public Communication, Participation, Release to Sewers - 11067 Education and Training Jung Bae, Eckert & Ziegler Isotope Products Co-Chairs: Elizabeth Bowers, US DOE; Jeff Frey, (USA) US DOE (USA) Lead Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Elizabeth C2. Simulation of Flow and Mercury Transport Bowers in Upper East Fork Poplar Creek, Oak Ridge, TN - 11361 Siamak Malek-Mohammadi, Georgio Tachiev, E1. National Nuclear Science Week: A New Way David Roelant, Reinaldo Garcia-Martinez, Amy to Broaden Our Communication Impact - Cook, Florida International University (USA) 11047 Jim Walther, National Museum of Nuclear C3. A Green Complex: Setting the Stage for a Science & History (USA) Future Mission New Mexico and Texas Energy Initiative - 11354 E2. Safe Community Co-Existence with Long- Lisa Lockrem, URS Corporation; James Hedin, Term Low-Level Radioactive Historic Waste Washington TRU Solutions, LLC; Roger Nelson, Contamination in Canada – Port Hope US DOE (USA) Example - 11314 Mark Gardiner, Atomic Energy of Canada C4. Application of Kenaf to Biofiltration of Limited (Canada) Wastewater and Contaminated Water for Removal of Heavy Metals - 11349 E3. The Role of the Northern New Mexico Fengxiang X. Han, Yi Su, David Monts, Citizens' Advisory Board (NNMCAB) in Mississippi State University (USA) Assuring the Protection of the Environment from Legacy Spills at Los Alamos National C5. Mid-Columbia Energy Initiative: Making Laboratory (LANL) - 11368 Hanford Cleanup Green - 11371 C. Mason, The Research Applications Bruce Covert, URS Corporation; Gary Petersen, Corporation; Gerry Maestas, Ralph Phelps, TRIDEC (USA) Northern New Mexico Citizen's Advisory Board C6. Overview of US DOE Office of Legacy (USA) Management Applied Science and E4. The Need for Open Source Books for Technology Program - 11347 Nuclear Workforce Training - 11384 Jalena Dayvault, US DOE; Stan Morrison, Jody Joshua Peterson, University of Texas at Austin Waugh, S.M. Stoller Corporation (USA) (USA) E5. Perceptions of Native Americans and Topic D: Planning, Characterization and Caucasians Interviewed at the Fort Hall Remediation of Toxic Metals Reservation about Natural Resource Co-Chairs: Mark Frei, Longenecker & Associates; Damage Assessment and Resources to be Dawn Kaback, AMEC Geomatrix (USA) Restored - 11386 Lead Organizer: Mark Frei Joanna Burger, Rutgers University; Charles Paper Reviewer: Dawn Kaback Powers, Vanderbilt University; Michael Gochfeld, Robert Wood Johnson Medical School(USA) D1. Formation and Characterization of Iron- E6. Mitigating Future Workforce Risk through Phosphate Precipitates: Relevance to the the Education of Young Children - 11551 Groundwater Remediation at DOE-Hanford Site - 11569 Joni Martin, Laura Clise, AREVA (USA) Prabhakar Pant, Reinier Hernandez, Leonel E7. Community-based Solid Management In Lagos, Florida International University (USA) Sub-Saharan Africa: Case Study, Cameroon D2. Analysis of Beryllium in Samples by Optical - 11480 Fluorescence: Method Adaptation for Field Eugene Asi, Günter Busch, Brandenburg and High Throughput (HT) Analysis - 11467 University of Technology, Cottbus (Germany) Anoop Agrawal, Lori Adams, John Cronin, Juan Carlos Tonazzi, Berylliant Inc (USA) Topic F: Security, Safety and Safeguards Co-Chairs: Kim Auclair, KD Auclair & Associates, D3. Investigation of the Effect of Uranium on LLC; Charles Waggoner, Mississippi State Microbial Surfaces using Atomic Force University (USA) Microscopy - 11422 Lead Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Kim Auclair Rakesh Guduru, Denny Carvajal, Yelena Katsenovich, Leonel Lagos, Dwayne McDaniel, Chen-Zhong Li, Florida International University F1. How to Manage Your Data, Instead of Your (USA) Data Managing You: Lessons from Dr. Deming’s Red Bead Experiment - 11430 Steven Prevette, Fluor; Anthony Umek, Savannah River Nuclear Solutions, LLC (USA)

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F2. Choosing Leading Indicators and Learning Add’l Organizer(s): Roger Merrick, Michael from the Results - 11431 Davidson Steven Prevette, Fluor; Anthony Umek, Panel Reporter: Michael Davidson Savannah River Nuclear Solutions, LLC (USA) F3. Tracking and Monitoring Nuclear Material This panel session will focus on small business and Waste Packages by Using the ARG-US procurement and contracting opportunities within the Radio Frequency Identification System - DOE Complex and on US Army Corp. of Engineers 11230 (USACE) projects. Both US DOE and USACE Brian Craig, Yung Liu, Hanchung Tsai, Hok Lee, encourage prime contractors to obtain goods and John Anderson, Argonne National Laboratory; services from small and disadvantaged business. James Shuler, US DOE (USA) Award fee is based partially on the contractor's F4. Homeland Defense Equipment Reuse success in achieving specific goals for subcontracts Program: A Way to Redeploy Excess with small and disadvantaged businesses. Goods and Materials and Reduce Waste - 11628 services being considered for subcontracting include Susan Cange, Anthony Sims, US DOE; the following: decontamination and decommissioning Jacqueline McLaughlin, G2 Engineering and services, remediation services, transportation and Management, Inc. (USA) disposal of radioactive waste, health physics equipment and services, emergency response planning and training, lab services, R&D products, March 2, Wednesday AM waste treatment services, maintenance services, A/E services and professional consulting. Panelists will include Contracting Officers or their representatives Session 56 from major US DOE Contractors and the USACE 8:30 AM - 10:10 AM Room 105B Kansas City District. This panel complements Session 56 which focuses on contracting activity directly with the US DOE. Panel: US DOE Procurement and Contracting Opportunities This Session Will Be Open To All WM2011 Exhibitors. Co-Chairs: John Longenecker, Longenecker & Associates, Inc.; Cathy Hickey, URS Corporation (USA) Panelists include: Ralph Holland, Assistant Lead Organizer and Panel Reporter: Cathy Hickey Director-Office of Contracting, US DOE; Keith Joy, Add’l Organizer: John Longenecker Director of Small Business Programs, Oak Ridge National Laboratory; Greg Meyer, Senior Vice President of Operations, Fluor Government Group; This panel will focus on the procurement Rich Meyer, Director of Supply Chain Management, process, lessons learned and the best practices Mission Support Alliance, LLC; Dave Oren, Vice that have been developed by the US DOE and NNSA President of Business Development, Marketing and over the last year. Proposals, CH2M HILL; Arthur Saulsberry, Small Business Administrator, USACE – Kansas City District This session will be open to all WM2011 and Tony Fountain, Senior Vice President of Exhibitors. Business Operations, URS Corporation (USA).

Panelists include: Jack Surash, Deputy Assistant Session 58 Secretary - Acquisition and Project Management, US DOE; Ralph Holland, Assistant Director - Office of 8:30 AM - 10:15 AM Room 102B Contracting, US DOE; Martin Schneider, Editor-in- Chief, ExchangeMonitor Publications and Greg Crosscutting Filtration Systems in the Nuclear Gonzales, Small Business Program Manager, NNSA Industry (USA). Co-Chairs: Charles Waggoner, Mississippi State Session 57 University; Chris Chadwick, Porvair Filtration 10:15 AM - 12:00 PM Room 105B Group, Microfiltrex Division (United Kingdom) Lead Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Charles Waggoner Panel: US DOE and USACE Small Business Add’l Organizer: Chris Chadwick Contracting Opportunities

Co-Chairs: Roger Merrick, E2 Consulting Engineers, 8:35 AG-1 HEPA Filters, A Comparison of Inc.; Michael Davidson, Tidewater, Inc. (USA) Configurations - 11604 Lead Organizer: John Coffman Andrew Stillo, Camfil Farr (USA)

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9:00 High Efficiency Particulate Air Filter Management Working Group and Contracts Quality Assurance - 11586 Manager, B&W Technical Services Group Jan Fretthold, Julie Stormo, Christopher Hart, Dave Crosby, Air Techniques International 5. Safety Initiatives: Safety Culture Project, Joint (USA) Supplier Evaluations Project and Work Controls - John McDonald, Integrated Safety Management 9:25 Factors to Consider to Avoid Problems in & Quality Assurance Working Group, Washington High Efficiency Particulate Air Filter River Protection Solutions; Mike Mason, Applications - 11585 (ISM/QA WG) and Deputy Manager Quality Jan Fretthold, Air Techniques International Assurance, Bechtel National and Tim Flake, (USA) ISM/QA (WG), Savannah River Nuclear Solutions 9:50 Results from Evaluation of ASME AG-1 Section FK Radial Flow HEPA Filters - 11287 6. ARRA Project Update - Kevin Kostelnik, Joint Paxton Giffin, Michael Parsons, Charles DOE-EFCOG ARRA Project Team Chairman, Waggoner, Mississippi State University; Jaime Savannah River Nuclear Solutions Rickert, Institute for Clean Energy Technology 7. Contractor Assurance Initiative: Leading (USA) Indicators and Contractor/Management Assurance - Jack Anderson, EFCOG Chair - Session 59 Contractor Assurance Working Group, Oak Ridge National Laboratory 10:15 AM - 12:00 PM Room 102B 8. Closing Remarks - Sue Stiger, Vice-Chair/Board Panel: US DOE - Energy Facility Contractors of Directors and Manager - EM, Bechtel National Group's (EFCOG) Knowledge Portal Review

Session 60 Co-Chairs: Joseph Yanek, Fluor Government Group; Susan Stiger, Bechtel National, Inc. (USA) 8:30 AM - 10:10 AM Room 103AB Lead Organizer: John Longenecker Add’l Organizer and Panel Reporter: Mark Frei Panel: Disposal of Large Quantities of Depleted Uranium - Role of Site Specific Performance This panel will focus on the various areas of EFCOG. Assessment EFCOG promotes excellence in all aspects of the operation, management and integration of US DOE Co-Chairs: Larry Camper, US NRC; Christine facilities in a safe, environmentally sound, efficient Gelles, US DOE (USA) and cost effective manner through the ongoing Lead Organizer: Larry Camper exchange of information on lessons learned. The Panel Reporter: Boby Abu-Eid purpose of this knowledge portal is to provide a vehicle to allow members to keep abreast of the This panel focuses on the large quantities of depleted latest news, issues and events across the DOE uranium in the US, which will need to be disposed of complex; for the sharing of innovative ideas and in the next several years. The US NRC has decided to practices and to collaborate virtually on the pursue Rulemaking to require a site specific development and implementation of new processes performance assessment for disposal of unique waste and practices. streams including large quantities of depleted uranium. The US NRC Rulemaking will also identify Panelists and topics include: the technical parameters to be evaluated within the performance assessment. The panel will discuss this 1. EFCOG Overview - Joe Yanek, EFCOG complex topic including suggestions for conducting Chair/Board of Directors and Executive Director - the performance assessment. ESQ&H, Fluor Panelists include: David Esh, US NRC; Marty 2. Regulatory Directives Reform Initiative – Tony Letourneau, US DOE; Tom Magette, Umek, EFCOG Chair, Environment Safety and EnergySolutions; Jean-Francois Gervais, AREVA, Health Working Group (France); Rusty Lundberg, State of Utah and 3. Project Management Initiatives: DOE 413.3B Christopher Thomas, HEAL Utah (USA). Order, PARS II and Corrective Actions and December 2010 DOE Project & Contract Management Summit - Robert Miklos, EFCOG Chair - Project Management Working Group, Idaho National Laboratory 4. Contract Management Initiative - Kathy Vaselopulos, EFCOG Chair - Acquisition

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Session 61 3. Shifting from R&D to Preparing for the Operation of Disposal Facility, Ensuring 10:15 AM - 12:00 PM Room 103AB Competence and Competence Providing Infrastructures for a Small Waste Panel: Disposition of US DOE High Activity Management Organization, Case of Mixed Waste (and Orphans): Post 2010 Posiva Oy - Marjatta Palmu, Posiva Oy (Finland) Co-Chairs: Dick Blauvelt, Portage Inc; Christine 4. Qualification of a Federal Workforce - Gelles, US DOE (USA) James Szenasi, Technical and Business Lead Organizer and Panel Reporter: Dick Blauvelt Solutions 5. Training and Qualification of an This panel will focus on the latest issues surrounding Operational Nuclear Workforce - Gary the disposition of US DOE high activity mixed waste. Scott, US DOE The US DOE sites have the bulk of the inventory of 10-100nCi/g alpha mixed waste that was formerly 6. PETRUS Program; A Coordinated managed as suspect TRU waste but is not eligible for European Initiative to Address Industry WIPP disposal. Is this a problem nearing a solution? Needs for E&T in Deep Geological Will storage be available after 12/01/2010 until an Disposal - Marjatta Palmu, Posiva Oy acceptable disposal site is operational? Which (Finland) streams will still face treatment issues? These and other issues will be discussed with the panelists. 7. Panel Discussion Panelists include: Paul Degnan, IAEA (Austria); Panelists include: Christine Gelles, US DOE; Wang Ju, Beijing Research Institute of Uranium Frank Disanza, US DOE; Robert Piper, Bechtel Geology (China); Marjatta Palmu, Posiva Research BWXT Idaho, LLC; James Blankenhorn, WVES; (Finland); James Szenasi, US DOE and Gary Scott, Paul Larsen, EnergySolutions; Mike Lauer, Waste Excel Staffing (USA). Control Specialists; Renee Echols, Perma-Fix Environmental Services, Inc. and Kathy Johns- Session 63 Hughes, Los Alamos National Laboratory. 8:30 AM - 12:00 PM Room 101B

Session 62 TRU Waste Disposal at WIPP 8:30 AM - 12:00 PM Room 104AB Co-Chairs: Steve Kouba, URS Corporation; George Panel: Training and Human Resource Dials, B&W Technical Services Group, Inc. (USA) Development in Radioactive Waste Management Lead Organizer: Roger Nelson Paper Reviewer: Steve Kouba Co-Chair: James Szenasi, Technical and Business Solutions (USA); Paul Degnan, IAEA (Austria) 8:35 Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP) Status Lead Organizer: John Dalton and Plans - 2011 - 11039 Add’l Organizer(s): Irena Mele, Paul Degnan Roger Nelson, US DOE (USA) Panel Reporter: Paul Degnan 9:00 An Analysis of WIPP after Five Years of Independent Oversight - 11059 This session will focus on the efforts of the IAEA and Jerry Fox, Christopher Timm, PECOS different IAEA Member States in training and Management Services, Inc. (USA) development of human resources for performing activities in radioactive waste management, 9:25 Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP) decommissioning and environmental remediation. It Repository Footprint Re-Design - 11238 will consist of five individual presentations with Art Chavez, Steve Kouba, URS Corporation; Q/A followed by a group panel discussion with the Russell Patterson, US DOE; Michael Gross, MG time remaining. All students, companies and agencies Enterprises (USA) should attend this informative session. 9:50 Representativeness of Sampling by Shrouded Probes in the Exhaust Shaft of 1. The Role of the IAEA in the Provision of the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant - 11308 Education and Training for Radioactive Michael Gross, MG Enterprises; Stanley Waste Management - Paul Degnan, IAEA Patchet, Washington TRU Solutions; Jaci 2. Education and Training in Geological Davis, URS Corporation; Daniel Ferguson, Disposal of High Level Radioactive Waste Randy Elmore, US DOE (USA) in China - Wang Ju, Beijing Research 10:15 Break - Optional Institute of Uranium Geology (China)

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10:20 Radiolytic Hydrogen Generation and Solutions; Kayte Denslow, Battelle Pacific Methanogenesis in WIPP: An Empirical Northwest Division (USA) Point of View - 11040 10:15 Break - Optional Roger Nelson, US DOE (USA) 10:20 Sludge Retrieval from Hanford K-West 10:45 Panel Closure: A Change in WIPP's Future Basin Settler Tanks - 11449 Operations through Regulatory Gary Hofferber, Vista Engineering; Greg Compliance - 11240 Leshikar, AREVA; Eric Erpenbeck, CH2M HILL Tom Klein, Steve Kouba, URS Corporation; PRC (USA) Russell Patterson, US DOE; Michael Gross, MG 10:45 Using Commercially Available Robotic Enterprises (USA) Equipment to Sample and Remove Heels 11:10 Re-Evaluation of the 300-Year in Tanks with Internal Obstructions Performance Demonstration for WIPP - 11239 - 11236 Andrew Tisler, Savannah River Remediation, Michael Gross, MG Enterprises; William LLC (USA) Most, Robert Kehrman, URS Corp. (USA) 11:10 Testing of the Second Generation SpinTek 11:35 Hydrogeology and WIPP Compliance - Rotary Filter - 11357 11658 David Herman, Michael Poirier, Mark Fowley, Kristopher Kuhlman, SNL (USA) Savannah River National Laboratory; William Greene, Jason Gilmour, SpinTek Filtration; Session 64 Thomas Huff, Mark Keefer, Savannah River Remediation, LLC (USA) 8:30 AM - 12:00 PM Room 101C 11:35 Extending Vitrified Waste Canisters (CSD- V) Interim Storage Facility: Improving Storage and Retrieval of HLW - Part 2 Durability by New Elements of Design - 11497 Co-Chairs: Keith Miller, National Nuclear Laboratory Valerie Lesec, Stephane Sartelet, Pierre- (United Kingdom); Terri Fellinger, Savannah River Lionel FORBES, AREVA (France) Remediation, LLC (USA) Lead Organizer: Tom Brouns Add’l Organizer(s): Keith Miller, Terri Fellinger Session 65 Paper Reviewer: Keith Miller 8:30 AM - 12:00 PM Room 102A

8:35 Developing Slurry Property Ranges for Performance of Disposal Systems, Facilities and Non-Newtonian Vessels at the Hanford Sites for LLW, ILW, MW, NORM and TENORM WTP (Waste Treatment and Immobilization Plant) - 11381 Co-Chairs: Bob Hiergesell, Savannah River National Eric Slaathaug, Garth Duncan, Bechtel; Rod Laboratory; Martin Letourneau, US DOE (USA) Gimpel, Waste Treatment Plant Project (USA) Lead Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Bob Hiergesell 9:00 Estimating High-Level Waste Mixing Add’l Organizer: Martin Letourneau Performance in Hanford Double Shell Tanks - 11193 8:35 Abstraction of Information from 2 and 3 Mike Thien, Daniel Greer, Washington River Dimensional PORFLOW Models into a 1-D Protection Solutions; Paul Townson, GoldSim Model - 11404 EnergySolutions (USA) Glenn Taylor, Bob Hiergesell, Savannah River 9:25 Design and Fabrication of Test Facilities National Laboratory (USA) for the Demonstration of Jet Mixer 9:00 Modeling of an Optimized Multilayer Performance in the Hanford Double Shell Cover Design for a Uranium Mill Tailings Tanks - 11241 Disposal - 11607 Paul Townson, EnergySolutions; Mike Thien, Maria de Lurdes Dinis, Antonio Fiuza, Washington River Protection Solutions (USA) University of Porto (Portugal) 9:50 Evaluation of Three Ultrasonic 9:25 Managing Uncertainties Associated with Instruments for Critical Velocity Radioactive Waste Disposal: Task Group 4 Determination During Hanford Tank of the IAEA PRISM Project - 11190 Waste Transfer Operations - 11121 Roger Seitz, Savannah River National Jagannadha Bontha, Harold Adkins, Gerry Laboratory; Japie van Blerk, Aquisim Morgen, Margaret Greenwood, Jeromy Jenks, Consulting Pty Ltd (South Africa); Gerard Carolyn Burns, Philip Schonewill, Pacific Bruno, International Atomic Energy Agency Northwest National Laboratory; Theodore (Austria); Christine Gelles, US DOE (USA) Wooley, Washington River Protection

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9:50 Building Confidence in Performance - 11388 Assessments through Performance Heath Downey, MACTEC; John Conant, ABB Confirmation - 11394 Inc. (USA) Joseph Rustick, James Clarke, Vanderbilt 10:15 Break - Optional University; Martin Letourneau, US DOE (USA) 10:20 Decommissioning of the Beta-Gamma 10:15 Break - Optional Waste Store, Sellafield UK - 11498 10:20 Effect of Various Factors on the Durability Jeremy Hunt, Sellafield Ltd (United Kingdom) Prediction of Nuclear Waste Containment 10:45 Renovating a Highly Contaminated Structures - 11546 Radioisotope Production Hot Cell - 11337 Sohini Sarkar, David Kosson, Sankaran Teo Grochowski, Dominique Sanchette, Mahadevan, Kevin Brown, Vanderbilt Robatel (US & France); Philippe Van Boxem, University; H. Van Der Sloot, JCL Meeussen, National Institute of Radio-Elements (Belgium) Energy Research Centre of the Netherlands 11:10 Experience of MR and RFT Reactors’ (The Netherlands); Greg Flach, Christine Decommissioning in RSC (Kurchatov Langton, Savannah River National Laboratory Institute) - 11050 (USA) Viktor Volkov, Sergey Semenov, Alexander 10:45 Assessing Geospatial Aleatory Chesnokov, Vyacheslav Kolyadin, Valentina Uncertainty for Performance Assessment Muzrukova, RSC "Kurchatov Institute" Modeling - 11075 (Russia); Arthur Arustamov, SIA Radon Geoff Taylor, University of South Carolina; Institute (Russia) Richard Dimenna, Glenn Taylor, Savannah 11:35 Decommissioning of Radon-Type near River National Laboratory (USA) Surface Radioactive Waste Storage in 11:10 An Evaluation of Long-Term Performance Estonia, from Dangerous Scrap Yard to of Liner Systems for Low-Level Waste Green-Field - 11473 Disposal Facilities - 11455 Ivo Tatrik, Estonian Radioactive Waste Arthur Rood, Jeffrey Sondrup, Idaho National Management Agency - AS ALARA Ltd. Laboratory (USA) (Estonia)

Session 66 Session 67 8:30 AM - 12:00 PM Room 106B 8:30 AM - 12:00 PM Room 106C

D&D of Nuclear Contaminated Facilities (Non- US - Formerly Utilized Sites Remedial Action Power Generating Facilities/Large and Small Program (FUSRAP) and Other US Army Corp of Nuclear Facilities) Engineers Project

Co-Chairs: Jas Devgun, Sargent & Lundy, LLC; Julia Co-Chairs: Allen Roos, USACE; Steven Brown, Tripp, Idaho National Laboratory (USA) SHB Inc. (USA) Lead Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Fred Sheil Lead Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Allen Roos Add’l Organizer(s): Al Freitag, Julia Tripp Add’l Organizer: Steven Brown

8:35 Remotely Controlled Dismantling of 8:35 Pre-MARSSIM (Multi-Agency Radiation HLLW-Storage Tanks: First Application of Survey and Site Investigation Manual) the Tools and Machinery in Hot Operation Surveys in a MARSSIM World: - 11278 Demonstrating how Pre-MARSSIM Joachim Dux, Werner Lutz, Klaus Hendrich, Radiological Data Demonstrates WAK GmbH (Germany) Protectiveness at Formerly Utilized Sites 9:00 Decommissioning Sellafield’s First Fuel Remedial Action Program Sites - 11319 Storage Pond - 11125 Christopher Clayton, Vijendra Kothari, US Anthony Calvin, Sellafield Ltd (United DOE; Michael Widdop, Joey Gillespie, Susan Kingdom) Kamp, Laura Cummins, S.M. Stoller 9:25 The Complex Challenges of Treating Corporation (USA) Liquid Effluent from a Legacy Fuel 9:00 Improving Data Collection Efficiency Storage Silo at Sellafield - 11286 during Site Inspection through Hugh Bourque, Stephen Le Clere, Sellafield Innovative Data Collection and Focused Ltd (United Kingdom) Sampling - 11418 9:50 Implementation of Fissile Exempt Chris Boes, MD Rahman, Claude Wiblin, Materials in Support of Decommissioning Cabrera Services, Inc.; Ann Ewy, Helen Edge, a Former Nuclear Fuel Manufacturing Site USACE (USA)

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9:25 Determining Acceptable Protocols for Technology: Reducing Uncertainty and Periodic Radon Monitoring of Structures Increasing Efficiency at a NRC Test over Inaccessible Contamination on the Reactor Decommissioning Site - 11244 Maywood Superfund Site - 11428 Andrew Lombardo, Safety and Ecology Scott Walnicki, Safety and Ecology Corporation; Jeffrey Lively, Alejandro Lopez, Corporation (SEC); Andrew Mills, The Shaw MACTEC Development Corp (USA) Group Inc.; David Hays, USACE (USA) 9:00 Assessment Radioactive Contamination 9:50 Methodology for Determination of Effect to Population - 11088 Exposure Point Concentration Using Both Maira Mukusheva, Baranov Sergey, National Systematic and Biased Samples for Nuclear Center (Russia); Sergey Spiridonov, Radiological Risk and Dose Assessments - All-Russian SRI of Agricultural Radiology and 11488 Agroecology (Russia) Randy Hansen, Steve Passig, Science 9:25 “Shake-and-Shoot”: A Rapid Solvent Applications International Corporation; MD Extraction Process for PCBs Rahman, Cabrera Services, Inc. (USA) (Polychlorinated Biphenyls) and TPH 10:15 Break - Optional (Total Petroleum Hydrocarbons) - 11375 10:20 Disposal of Formerly Utilized Sites Lisa Bercik, Shaw Environmental & Remedial Action Program (FUSRAP) Infrastructure, Inc. (USA) Wastes – Weighing the Options - 11536 9:50 Real Time Data for Remediation Activities John Beckman, Hans Honerlah, Nicki - 11505 Fatherly, USACE; Andrew Lombardo, Safety John Stamper, Chris Brock, CH2M HILL PRC and Ecology Corporation; Michael O'Neill, Amy (USA) Glemza, EA Engineering, Science and 10:15 Break - Optional Technology, Inc. (USA) 10:20 Preliminary Study of a Prototype Methyl- 10:45 Remediation of NRC Burial Pits No. 1, 2 Mercury Monitor for In-Field Pore Water and 3 Lessons Learned at the Maywood Sample Analyses - 11559 Superfund Site; Maywood, New Jersey - Charles Castello, Guangliang Liu, Yanbin Li, 11594 Yong Cai, David Roelant, Leonel Lagos, James Moore, David Hays, USACE; William Jeffrey Fan, Florida International University Kollar, The Shaw Group Inc. (USA) (USA) 11:10 Taking an Incremental Approach to 10:45 Evaluating Petroleum Hydrocarbon Remediation and Final Status Survey to Contaminated Soil - 11557 Increase Remedial Efficiency, Minimize Lynn Kidman, S.M. Stoller Corporation; Impacts to Property Owners & Tenants, Robert Boehlecke, US DOE (USA) Exceed Goals for Remediation, Release of Accessible Areas and Minimize Secondary 11:10 Use of the AMS Helicopter Emergency Costs - 11429 Response Acquisition Systems with GIS Joseph Donakowski, David Hays, USACE; for Radioactive Soil Remediation - 11504 Scott Walnicki, Safety and Ecology John Stamper, Chris Brock, CH2M HILL PRC Corporation (SEC) (USA) (USA) 11:35 The Use of Uncertainties in Determination 11:35 Optimized Spectral Transformation for of Measurement Variance - 11118 Detection and Classification of Buried Brian Tucker, Doug Black, The Shaw Group Radioactive Waste - 11310 Inc.; David Hays, USACE (USA) Nicolas Younan, Qian Du, Wei Wei, Charles Waggoner, Donna Rogers, Mississippi State University (USA) Session 68 8:30 AM - 12:00 PM Room 105C Session 69 8:30 AM - 12:00 PM Room 106C Innovative Field Monitoring for Environmental Remediation Radiological Dispersion Devices and other Nuclear Weapons of Mass Destruction: Co-Chairs: Mark Arenaz, US DOE; Erich Evered, Detection, Response, Decontamination and Mission Support Alliance, LLC (USA) Recovery Lead Organizer: David Eaton Add’l Organizer: Donna Guillen Paper Reviewer: Mark Arenaz Co-Chairs: Kim Auclair, KD Auclair & Associates, LLC; Larry Regens, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center (USA) 8:35 Application of Soil Segregation

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Lead Organizer: Kim Auclair Stephen Marschke, S. Cohen & Associates; Paper Reviewer: Larry Regens Brian Littleton, US EPA (USA)

8:35 Issues Associated with Decision Making Topic B: Global Packaging and Transportation in Long-Term Recovery Following a Topics Nuclear or Radiological Terrorism Co-Chairs: Mike Snyder, MHF Services; Incident - 11035 Christopher Brandjes, Argonne National Laboratory S.Y. Chen, Argonne National Laboratory; Lead Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Mike Nolan Thomas Tenforde, National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements (USA) B1. Challenges in Classifying Low Specific 9:00 Side-by-Side Performance Comparison of Activity Material and Surface Contaminated Chemical-Based Decontamination Objects - 11200 Products for Dirty Bomb Cleanup - 11099 Wade Winters, Regulatory Resources, Inc. John Drake, US EPA; Rick Demmer, Idaho (USA) National Laboratory; Ryan James, Battelle B2. Mathematical Modeling of Processes in (USA) Water-Filled Containers during 9:25 The Revised National Response Transportation and Disposal of Radioactive Framework to Catastrophic Events: Waste - 11045 Implementing a "Whole Community Gagik Karamyan, Gagik Martoyan, AREV CJSC; Approach" in Response to a Nuclear or Hajk Khalafyan, Ecoatom, LLC (Armenia) Radiological Attack upon the Homeland - B3. The DN30 Package for the Transport of 11103 Enriched Reprocessed Uranium - 11111 Michael Gresalfi, DHS FEMA (USA) Franz Hilbert, Wolfgang Bergmann, Nuclear 9:50 Systematic Decontamination and Cargo + Service GmbH (Germany) Recovery Following a Radiological Dispersal Device Event - 11540 Topic C: Global Decontamination & Bruce Biwer, David LePoire, S.Y. Chen, Decommissioning Issues Argonne National Laboratory (USA) Co-Chairs: Rick Demmer, Idaho National 10:15 Break - Optional Laboratory; Jeffrey Hunter, Mission Support Alliance, LLC (USA) 10:20 Using EPA’s Risk Assessment Tools for Lead Organizer: Rick Demmer Superfund when Addressing Removal Paper Reviewer: Jeffrey Hunter Actions and Late-Phase Responses to Terrorist Attacks - 11568 Stuart Walker, US EPA (USA) C1. Permeability and Dispersion Coefficients in Rocks with Fracture Network - 11493 Cheo Kyung Lee, Myo Zaw Htway, Hyo Kim, Poster Session 70 Handong Global University; Sung Paal Yim, 8:30 AM - 12:30 PM 1st Floor Foyer Korea Atomic Energy Research Institute (Republic of Korea) Posters: Crosscutting – A C2. Evaluation of Variables Affecting Detection Packaging & Transportation - B Limits for Mobilized Gamma Detection D&D – C-F Platforms - 11350 Charles Waggoner, Charles Vaughan, Jay Topic A: Crosscutting WM Policies, Programs McCown, Donna Rogers, Mississippi State and Technologies University (USA) Co-Chairs: Tjalle Vandergraaf, Providence College (Canada); Neil Davis, Savannah River Remediation, Topic D: D&D: Demolition and Remote LLC (USA) Operations Lead Organizer: Tjalle Vandergraaf Co-Chairs: Steven Wood, CDM; Con Lyras, Paper Reviewer: Gerald Williams Australian Nuclear Science & Technology Organisation (Australia) A1. PARS II: Redefining Program Oversight & Lead Organizer: Steven Wood Assessment at the DOE - 11363 Paper Reviewer: Con Lyras Simon Dekker, Vance Kotrla, Dekker, Ltd. (USA) D1. Implosion & Debris Cleanup of SRS A2. Use of Integrated Environmental Decision Hyperbolic Concrete Cooling Tower - 11599 Making to Combine Greenhouse Gas and Bill Schaab, Mike Furner, American Demolition Radiological Hazards on Energy and Nuclear Decommissioning Inc. (USA) Alternatives Using Life Cycle Analyses - 11208

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D2. D&D of the 2000 Complex Facilities at Oak F3. Study the Polymer Coating for Detecting Ridge National Laboratory - 11199 and Surface Decontamination of Uranium - Michael Harper, UT-Battelle LLC; Thomas 11494 Conley, Marshall Johnson, Chadwick Replogle, Pham Luong, Nguyen Van Chinh, Vietnam Kenneth Schneider, Stuart McCullough, Theresa Atomic Energy Institute (Vietnam) Walsh, Oak Ridge National Laboratory (USA) F4. Nevada Test Site Pluto and RMAD Facility D3. Powered Remote Manipulator - 11312 Closure: ARRA Funding Acceleration of Matt Cole, S.A. Robotics, Inc. (USA) Demolition and Lessons Learned - 11157 Annette Primrose, Rebecca King, National Topic E: D&D: Decontamination Techniques Security Technologies, LLC; Tom Thiele, NSTec, Co-Chairs: Andrew Szilagyi, US DOE; Anthony LLC; Kevin Cabble, Alissa Silvas, US DOE (USA) Banford, National Nuclear Laboratory (United Kingdom) March 2, Wednesday PM Lead Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Andrew Szilagyi Session 71 E1. Usage, Supercritical Fluids and Compressed 1:30 PM - 5:00 PM Room 102B Gases with Purpose of Decontamination and Long-Lived Radionuclide Recovery - 11293 Yury Pokhitonov, Vladislav Kamachev, Khlopin Panel: Featured Site: West Valley Radium Institute (Russia) Demonstration Project - Accomplishments and Challenges from Past Practices E2. Chemical Gel for Decontamination of Cs on Stainless Steel Surface - 11257 Chong Hun Jung, Jei-Kwon Moon, Hui-Jun Won, Co-Chair: James Blankenhorn, Laurene Rowell, Kune-Woo Lee, Chang Ki Kim, Korea Atomic West Valley Environmental Services, LLC (USA) Energy Research Institute (Republic of Korea) Lead Organizer: James Fiore Add’l Organizer: James Blankenhorn E3. Nitrojet®: A Versatile Tool for Panel Reporter: Sonja Allen Decontamination, Cutting and Concrete Scabbling - 11225 Fabrice Moggia, Ahmed Benamane, Thierry This panel consists of oral presentations followed by a Varet, Valerie Toulemonde, Frederique 25 minute panel discussion. The panel focuses on the Damerval, AREVA; Frederic Richard, AIR West Valley Demonstration Project (WVDP) of the US LIQUIDE (France); Gary Anderson, Nitrocision DOE, located in New York. It will showcase the (USA) unique challenges and lessons learned from the decommissioning activities for the nation’s only E4. Progress in Remote Dismantling of the commercial fuel reprocessing facility. It will highlight WAK/ILLW Tanks, Lessons Learned for the recent progress and technological advancements in Remote Dismantling of the HLLW Tanks of High-level, Low-level, Transuranic and Greater-than- the German Prototype Spent Fuel Class C Waste management practices, environmental Reprocessing Plant Karlsruhe - 11095 remediation of groundwater, remote decontamination Joachim Dux, Werner Lutz, Martina Ripholz, and decommissioning and High-level waste tank Daniel Friedrich, WAK GmbH (Germany) management.

Topic F: D&D: Contamination Control Measures Co-Chairs: J. Rick Dearholt, Sullivan International Panelists include: Bryan Bower, Director-WV Group; Con Lyras, Australian Nuclear Science & Demonstration Project, US DOE; John McKibbin, Technology Organisation (Australia) President, West Valley Environmental Services; Paul Lead Organizer: J. Rick Dearholt Bembia, Program Director, New York State Energy Paper Reviewer: Con Lyras Research and Development Authority; and Larry Camper, US NRC (USA). F1. Database of Contaminated Concretes and its Role within Conception of Buildings 1:35 West Valley Demonstration Project - Past, Clearance - 11262 Present, and Future - 11203 Martin Listjak, Ondrej Slavik, Pavol Gondor, James Blankenhorn, West Valley VUJE, Inc. (Slovak Republic) Environmental Services, LLC; Bryan Bower, US DOE (USA) F2. Modeling of Loose Contamination Removal from Contaminated Surfaces - 11298 2:00 Deactivation and Decontamination of Merlin Ngachin, Surendra Dua, Alejandro Extraction Cell - 1 at the West Valley Amor, Leonel Lagos, Florida International Demonstration Project - 11127 University; Duriem Calderin, Columbia Energy Joseph Ebert, Cynthia Dayton, West Valley and Environmental Services Inc. (USA) Environmental Services, LLC (USA)

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2:25 Installation of a Tank and Vault Drying Session 73 System in the Tank Farm at the West Valley Demonstration Project - 11113 John G. McKibbin, Daniel Meess, K. K. Gupta, Panel: Developments in the American Recovery West Valley Environmental Services, LLC; Mark and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) Bellis, US DOE (USA) 2:50 Design and Installation of a Permeable This session has been merged with Session 72. Treatment Wall at the West Valley Demonstration Project to Mitigate Session 74 Expansion of Strontium-90 Contaminated 1:30 PM - 3:10 PM Room 104AB Groundwater - 11138 John Chamberlain, Linda Michalczak, West Valley Environmental Services, LLC (USA) Panel: Nuclear Renaissance - New Nuclear Plants Hot Topics 3:15 Break - Optional 3:20 Getting WVDP Wastes on the Right Path to Disposal - 11140 Co-Chairs: Jay Maisler, Enercon Services, Inc; Jas Margaret Loop, Laurene Rowell, West Valley Devgun, Sargent & Lundy, LLC (USA) Environmental Services, LLC (USA) Lead Organizer and Panel Reporter: Jas Devgun Add’l Organizer(s): Jay Maisler, Kim Auclair 3:45 CH and RH Legacy Waste Processing at the WVDP: Utilizing All of Your Processing Facilities, "Even the Ones You Didn’t Think This panel will focus on the progress towards Were Processing Facilities" - 11160 licensing the next generation of nuclear power plants David Garber, Margaret Loop, Kevin Slomba, that has progressed with construction looming on the West Valley Environmental Services, LLC (USA) horizon. Panelists will discuss experience from license application submittals and their regulatory review, 4:10 Decontamination Using Remote-Deployed design certification experience and next generation Nitrocision® Technology - 11221 nuclear plant development. In addition to radioactive Lettie Chilson, Lora Winkler, West Valley waste licensing and systems design, panelists will Environmental Services, LLC (USA) discuss decommissioning considerations in plant 4:35 Panel Discussion design, the impact of new plant construction on sites with operating plants or plants undergoing decommissioning. The panel will also include Session 72 discussions related to security and safeguards for 1:30 PM - 3:10 PM Room 105B new power plants.

Panel: Developments and Lessons Learned in Panelists include: Mark Marano, Senior VP, New the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act Builds Operations (USA); and Gerard (ARRA) Laurent, Electricite de France (EDF) (France).

Co-Chair: John Kristofzski, CH2M HILL (USA) Session 75 Lead Organizer: John Kristofzski Panel Reporter: Del Baird 3:15 PM - 5:00 PM Room 104AB

This panel will focus on the lessons learned on Panel: Impacts of Updates to DOE's Radioactive integrating additional ARRA work scope to safely Waste Management Order implement opportunities to advance contaminated site clean-up efforts at the project and activity level. Co-Chairs: Martin Letourneau, US DOE; Frank In addition to lessons learned the panel will highlight Disanza, US DOE (USA) on the ending of the ARRA and the policy implications Lead Organizer: Martin Letourneau for the future of the DOE – EM programs. Panel Reporter: Roger Seitz

Panelists include: Lee McGetrick, Oak Ridge This panel focuses on the expected impacts of the National Laboratory; Allen Schubert, CH2M-WG DOE’s efforts to update its radioactive waste Idaho, LLC; Karen Vacca, URS Corporation; John management requirements in DOE Order Lehew, President and Chief Executive Officer, CH2M 435.1. Panelists will discuss the overall revision HILL PRC and Frank Armijo, President & General process, impetus for specific proposed changes, Manager, Mission Support Alliance, LLC. impacts of those changes, processes leading to specific changes, and the expected impacts for specific waste types and options.

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Panelists include: Martin Letourneau, Frank Savannah River Tank 48 High-Level Waste DiSanza, Joel Case, J.R. Stroble and Linda into a Soluble Granular Carbonate Product Suttora, US DOE (USA). - 11373 Brent Evans, Vishal Vora, J. Brad Mason, W. Scott Roesener, Christina Payne, THOR Session 76 Treatment Technologies, LLC; Azadeh Samadi, 1:30 PM - 3:15 PM Room 106A Savannah River Remediation, LLC (USA) 3:45 Development of a Cermet High-Level Waste Reduction by Fuel Recycling: Analysis Waste Form - 11116 and Insight Robert Jubin, W. S. Aaron, Clint Ausmus, Emory Collins, Valmor F. de Almeida, Guillermo Co-Chairs: Robert Jubin, Oak Ridge National DelCul, Jared A. Johnson, Bradley Patton, Laboratory; Bernard Vigreux, French Nuclear Ramond Vedder, Stewart L. Voit, Oak Ridge Energy Society (France) National Laboratory (USA) Lead Organizer: Bernard Vigreux 4:10 Cermet Waste Forms for Waste Streams Add’l Organizer: Robert Jubin from Advanced Aqueous Processing of Paper Reviewer: Harry Babad Used Nuclear Fuels - 11348 Luis Ortega, Zuotao Zeng, James Cunnane, 1:35 Radiotoxicity Characterization of HLW Michael Kaminski, Ken Natesan, Argonne from Reprocessing of Uranium-Based vs. National Laboratory (USA) Thorium-Based Fuel - 11390 4:35 Radioactive Demonstrations of Fluidized Yasir Arafat, Fausto Franceschini, Edward Bed Steam Reforming (FBSR) as a Lahoda, Mario Carelli, Michael Wenner, Paolo Supplementary Treatment for Hanford's Ferroni, John Lyons, Westinghouse Electric Low Activity Waste (LAW) and Secondary Company LLC; Michael Huang, Bojan Petrovic, Waste (SW) - 11593 Georgia Institute of Technology (USA) Carol Jantzen, Charles Crawford, Paul Burket, 2:00 Methods for Fuel Cycle Analysis in Support Gene Daniel, Alex Cozzi, Christopher of a Reduction of the Radiotoxicity of High- Bannochie, Savannah River National Laboratory Level Waste - 11356 (USA) Maria Kretzing, Edward Lahoda, Westinghouse Electric Company, LLC (USA) Session 78 2:25 Prioritization Criteria for the Selection of 1:30 PM - 3:15 PM Room 105C Used Nuclear Fuel for Recycling - 11008 William Nutt, Argonne National Laboratory; Thomas Cotton, Complex Systems Group LLC; Technologies and Advances in TRU Waste Zachary Duncan, University of Illinois (USA) Processing 2:50 Recycle of Zirconium from Used Nuclear Fuel Cladding: A Major Element of Waste Co-Chairs: Terry Wickland, Nuclear Filter Reduction - 11336 Technology; Michael Walentine, Washington TRU Emory Collins, Guillermo DelCul, Oak Ridge Solutions (USA) National Laboratory (USA); D.S. Terekhov, N.V. Lead Organizer: Roger Nelson Emmanuel, Chemical Vapor Metal Refining, Inc. Add’l Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Terry (Canada) Wickland

1:35 RH-TRU Processing to Accomplish Nuclear Session 77 Footprint Reduction Goals at the Argonne 3:15 PM - 5:00 PM Room 106A National Laboratory Building 205 K-Wing Hot Cell Facility - 11370 Alternative Technologies for Waste Stabilization Devin Hodge, Jeffrey Emery, Argonne National Laboratory; John Mackin, PMP, Hukari Technical Co-Chairs: Ned Bibler, Savannah River Nuclear Services, Inc. (USA) Solutions-Retired; Stuart Arm, EnergySolutions 2:00 Siting Study for a Consolidated Waste (USA) Capability at Los Alamos National Lead Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Ned Bibler Laboratory - 11087 Add’l Organizer(s): Gordon Crawford, Leslie Steven Booth, Los Alamos National Laboratory Jardine (USA) 2:25 Infrared Camera System for TRU Waste 3:20 Fluidized Bed Steam Reforming Production Drum Remediation Activities at the Facility Design for the Conversion of Savannah River Site - 11555

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Monica Phillips, Kenneth Gibbs, Savannah Co-Chairs: Gabriele Bandt, TÜV NORD EnSys River National Laboratory; Brent Daugherty, US Hannover (Germany); Paul Larsen, EnergySolutions DOE (USA) (USA) Lead Organizer: Linda Beach 2:50 Carbon Tetrachloride Attenuation in the Add’l Organizer(s): Paul Larsen, Holger Spann WIPP Underground Ventilation Air Using a Paper Reviewer: Gabriele Bandt Granulated Activated Carbon (GAC) Volatile Organic Compound (VOC) Removal System - 11374 1:35 On-Site, Near Surface Disposal of Graphite Esteban Picazo, Eric D'Amico, Wesley (Wes) Waste in the United Kingdom - 11271 Boatwright, Rick Chavez, Jaci Davis, John Adam Meehan, Peter Sibley, Al Johnson, Doherty, David Ganaway, Jennifer Hendrickson, EnergySolutions; Jeremey Lightfoot, Golder URS Corporation; George Basabilvazo, US DOE Associates (UK) Ltd.; Duncan Jackson, Eden (USA) Nuclear & Environment Ltd. (United Kingdom) 2:00 Very Low-Level Waste Disposal in France: Session 79 The Industrial Issues - 11554 Gérald Ouzounian, Michel Dutzer, Patrice 3:15 PM - 5:00 PM Room 105C Torres, A. Laurent Schacherer, ANDRA (France) 2:25 Experience on a Regulatory Clearance of International Approaches to Deep Disposal of Spent Steel Drums - 11281 HLW and SNF Dae-Seok Hong, Il-Sik Kang, Young-Yong Ji, T. K. Kim, Woo-Seog Ryu, Korea Atomic Energy Co-Chairs: Abe Van Luik, US DOE; Leif Eriksson, Research Institute (Republic of Korea) Consultant (USA) 2:50 Performance Enhancement of Reverse Lead Organizer: Roger Nelson Osmosis System for Liquid Radwaste Add’l Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Leif Eriksson Treatment - 11518 Jongkil Park, Kyoung-Rok Park, Hang-Rae 3:20 State of the Art for Stacking and Emplacing Cho, Korea Hydro and Nuclear Power Co. Ltd. B Type Waste Packages into Large (Republic of Korea) Horizontal Disposal Caverns in a Clay Host 3:15 Break – Optional Formation - 11005 3:20 Performance of Steam Reforming Jean-Michel Bosgiraud, ANDRA (France) Technology in a Long Term Treatment of 3:45 The French Geological Repository Project: Waste TBP/Dodecane - 11079 A Converging Approach - 11013 Akinori Nakagawa, Tomoyuki Sone, Toshiki Gérald Ouzounian, Marie-Claude Dupuis, Sasaki, Osamu Nakazawa, Kiyoshi Tashiro, ANDRA (France) Japan Atomic Energy Agency (Japan) 4:10 Disposal of Spent Fuel from German 3:45 Remediation of the Former Iodine Nuclear Power Plants: The Third Option - Production NORM Contaminated Tanks - Disposal of Transport and Storage Casks - 11451 11517 Mikhail Boriskin, Alexander Gelbutovsky, Wolfgang Filbert, Marion Tholen, Hans- Peter Cheremisin, Alexander Troshev, Joachim Engelhardt, DBE Technology GmbH; Alexander Egorov, JSC ECOMET-S (Russia) Reinhold Graf, Klaus-Jürgen Brammer, 4:10 Summary of the Workshop on Engineered Gesellschaft für Nuclear-Service mbH Barrier Performance Related to Low-Level (Germany) Radioactive Waste, Decommissioning, and 4:35 Development of the Strategic Research Uranium Mill Tailings Facilities - 11323 Agenda of the Implementing Geological George Alexander, Hans Arlt, Thomas Disposal of Radioactive Waste Technology Nicholson, US NRC (USA) Platform - 11020 4:35 Destruction of Organic Liquid Nuclear Marjatta Palmu, Posiva Research (Finland); Waste by a SuperCritical Water Oxidation Gérald Ouzounian, ANDRA (France) Process: Operating Parameters Optimization and Study of the Reaction Session 80 Stability - 11072 Jean-Christophe Ruiz, Florian Pujol, Frederic 1:30 PM - 5:00 PM Room 106B Charton, Guillaume Ranc, Hubert Alexandre Turc, Christophe Joussot-Dubien, CEA Marcoule Operating Experience in the Treatment and (France) Storage of LLW, ILW, MW, NORM and TENORM

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Session 81 4:10 Characterization of Legacy Low-Level Waste at the SVAFO Facility Using Gama 1:30 PM - 3:15 PM Room 102A Non-Destructive Assay and X-Ray Non- Destructive Examination Techniques - The Uranium Mining Industry - Current Topics 11405 and Issues Steve Halliwell, VJ Technologies (USA) 4:35 Characterization of Radioactive Spent Ion- Co-Chairs: Steven Brown, SHB Inc.; Erich Tiepel, Exchange Resins - 11144 Golder Associates, Inc (USA) Vanusa Maria Jacomino, Maria Helena Lead Organizer: Steven Brown Taddei, National Nuclear Energy Commission; Add’l Organizer(s): Larry Camper, Erich Tiepel Luis Antonio Terremoto, Roberto Vicente, Paper Reviewer: Erich Tiepel Nuclear and Energy Research Institute (Brazil)

1:35 Moab Uranium Mill Tailings Remedial Session 83 Action (UMTRA) Project, Process 1:30 PM - 5:00 PM Room 101B Improvement Team Implementation and Results - 11077 Craig Niemeyer, Lawrence M. Brede, Radioactive Material Packaging and EnergySolutions; Tom Rasmussen, Union Pacific Transportation Regulatory Issues Railroad (USA) 2:00 The Global Reporting Initiative and Co-Chairs: Richard Yoshimura, Sandia National Implications for the Uranium Recovery Laboratory; Mike Nolan, Dade Moeller (USA) Industry - 11608 Lead Organizer: Richard Yoshimura Rod Grebb, Michelle Rehmann, HER Creative Add’l Organizer(s): Paul Jones, Larry Harmon Solutions, LLC (USA) Paper Reviewer: Paul Jones 2:25 Development of the First Three Supplemental Environmental Impact 1:35 Effects of the MacArthur Maze Fire and Statements Tiered from the Generic Roadway Collapse on a Spent Nuclear Fuel Environmental Impact Statement for In- Transportation Package - 11392 situ Uranium Recovery Facilities - 11617 Christopher Bajwa, Earl Easton, US NRC; Kevin Hsueh, Larry Camper, US NRC (USA) Harold Adkins, Judith Cuta, Nicholas Klymyshyn, Sarah Suffield, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (USA) Session 82 2:00 Rail Risk: Severe Fires and the 3:15 PM - 5:00 PM Room 102A Transportation of Spent Nuclear Fuel - 11582 Waste Characterization for LLW, ILW, MW - Earl Easton, Christopher Bajwa, US NRC; T. Ionizing Measurement Methods - Part 2 Mintz, George Adams, Marius Necsoiu, Southwest Research Institute (USA) Co-Chairs: Stephen Croft, Los Alamos National 2:25 Spent Nuclear Fuel Transportation Package Laboratory; Frazier Bronson, Canberra Industries, Seal Performance in Beyond Design Basis Inc. (USA) Thermal Exposure Scenarios - 11391 Lead Organizer: Heinz Kroeger Christopher Bajwa, Earl Easton, Felix Add’l Organizer: Frazier Bronson Gonzalez, US NRC; Jiann Yang, Edward Paper Reviewer: Stephen Croft Hnetkovsky, National Institute of Standards and Technology (USA) 3:20 Fast Enrichment Screening for ‘Go-No-Go’ 2:50 Evaluation of Hydrogen Generation and Classification of Bulk Waste - 11270 Maximum Normal Operating Pressure for Alan Simpson, Pajarito Scientific Corporation Waste Transportation Packages - 11016 (United Kingdom); S.A. McElhaney, Pajarito Fon-Chieh (Jimmy) Chang, Peter Lien, Scientific Corporation (USA) Michael Waters, US NRC (USA) 3:45 Simulations of the Use of Cosmic-Rays to 3:15 Break - Optional Image Nuclear Waste and Verify the 3:20 Challenges Facing Low Specific Activity Contents of Used Nuclear Fuel Containers - (LSA) and Surface Contaminated Objects 11341 (SCO) US D.O.T. Shipments for D&D Waste Cybele Jewett, Vinicius Anghel, Guy Streams and Retrieved/Pre-packaged Jonkmans, Martin Thompson, Atomic Energy of Waste Containers - 11589 Canada Limited (Canada) Mike Waters, James McGrogan, Cavanagh Services Group, Inc. (USA)

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3:45 Improving the Communication of 3:45 Geophysics and Site Characterization at Requirements for Department of the Hanford Site: The Successful Use of Transportation Compliant Shipments of Electrical Resistivity to Position Boreholes Low Specific Activity Materials and Surface to Define Vadose Zone Contamination - Contaminated Objects - 11542 11509 Julia Donkin, US DOE (USA) Malcolm Gander, Washington State 4:10 American National Standard Institute University; Kevin Leary, US DOE; Charles Development of New Standard (N14.36) Miller, CH2M HILL PRC; Marc Levitt, Dale Measurement of Radiation Level and Rucker, hydroGEOPHYSICS, Inc. (USA) Surface Contamination for Packages and 4:10 Treatment of Uranium in Subsurface Water Conveyances - 11610 - 11616 Ashok Kapoor, US DOE; S.Y. Chen, Sunita Ernest Stine, Paul Hatzinger, Jonathan Myers, Kamboj, Argonne National Laboratory (USA) Shaw Environmental, Inc. (USA)

Session 84 Session 85 1:30 PM - 5:00 PM Room 101C 1:30 PM - 5:00 PM Room 103AB

Deep Vadose Zone Characterization and The Citizen Voice - Impacting the Nuclear Remediation Technologies Renaissance through Public Involvement

Co-Chairs: Kurt Gerdes, US DOE; Dyan Foss, Co-Chairs: Susan Wood, Citizens for Nuclear CH2M HILL PRC (USA) Technology Awareness; Karen Guevara, US DOE Lead Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Kurt Gerdes (USA) Add’l Organizer(s): Ed Alperin, Mark Frei Lead Organizer: W.T. (Sonny) Goldston Add’l Organizer(s): Susan Wood, Jan Phillips Paper Reviewer: Susan Wood 1:35 Deep Vadose Zone Applied Research Center – Transformational Technology Development for Environmental 1:35 Development of National Defense Remediation - 11074 Authorization Action Section 3116, Waste Dawn Wellman, Tim Johnson, Pacific Determinations and Other Tank Closure Northwest National Laboratory; Kurt Gerdes, Decisions through a Transparent Public Skip Chamberlain, John Morse, Rosa Ramirez, Process - 11406 US DOE (USA) Linda Suttora, Sherri Ross, US DOE (USA) 2:00 Advanced Remedial Methods for Metals 2:00 Public Opinion: Its Impact on Nuclear and Radionuclides in Deep Vadose Zone Waste Management Policy and Planning - Environments - 11026 11107 Dawn Wellman, Shas Mattigod, Lirong Zhong, Rose Hayes, Savannah River Site (USA) Ann Miracle, Fred Tilton, Pacific Northwest 2:25 Savannah River Site Citizens Advisory National Laboratory; Susan Hubbard, Yuxin Wu, Board- Elements That Have Contributed to Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory; Martin Our Success - 11188 Foote, MSE Technology Applications, Inc (USA) Donald Bridges, Savannah River Site (USA) 2:25 Scale-Up Testing Foam as a Remedial 2:50 Environmental Surveillance and Oversight Carrier - 11029 Program at Savannah River Site – Non- Martin Foote, Jody Bickford, MSE Technology Regulatory Environmental Monitoring around Applications, Inc; Dawn Wellman, Shas Savannah River Site - 11148 Mattigod, Elsa Cordova, Pacific Northwest Kimberly Newell, South Carolina Dept of National Laboratory (USA) Health and Environmental Control (USA) 2:50 Strategies for Immobilization of Deep 3:15 Break - Optional Vadose Contaminants at the Hanford 3:20 Community Involvement in Finding a Central Plateau - 11503 Pathway for Disposal of High-Level Glen Chronister, CH2M HILL PRC (USA) Nuclear Waste - 11051 3:15 Break - Optional Susan Gawarecki, ORR Local Oversight 3:20 Pumping Test Characterization of Deep Committee, Inc. (USA) Vadose Zone Properties - 11415 3:45 Yucca Mountain: A Regional Voice from Shlomo Neuman, Phoolendra Mishra, Solo to Chorus - 11066 University of Arizona (USA) Rick McLeod, Savannah River Site (USA)



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Poster Session 86 A9. Matching Funding to Expenses in Federal Programs and Projects - 11360 1:30 PM - 5:00 PM 1st Floor Foyer Simon Dekker, Vance Kotrla, Dekker, Ltd. (USA) Non-Paper Poster Session for Emerging Issues A10. Preliminary work on the Decommissioning of the Reactor MR in RRC (Russian Co-Chairs: Gary Benda, Bartlett Services, Inc.; Research Center), Kurchatov Institute - Linda Lehman, CH2M HILL PRC (USA) 11417 Lead Organizer: Gary Benda Arthur Arustamov, Konstantin Semenov, SIA Radon Institute; Viktor Volkov, RSC "Kurchatov A1. Design Optimization for Submerged Jet Institute"; Vladimir Chuikov, Alexander Nozzle for Enhanced Mixing - 11552 Goncharov, JSC “Aliance-Gamma” (Russia) Edgard Espinosa, George Dulikravich, Leonel A11. Microbial Community Profiling for Vadose Lagos, Florida International University (USA) Zone Remediation - 11454 A2. Role of Aluminum Dimer and Carbonate in Amoret Bunn, Fred Tilton, Dawn Wellman, Controlling the Aluminum Solubility for Ann Miracle, Pacific Northwest National Hanford Waste - 11605 Laboratory (USA) Cliff Johnston, Purdue University; Jacob A12. Thermal Response of Nuclear Waste Reynolds, Washington River Protection Transportation Package to Baltimore Solutions; Stephen Agnew, Columbia Energy & Tunnel Fire Scenario- 11574 Environmental Services, Inc. (USA) Miles Greiner, Narayana Rao Chalasani, A3. Selection of Additives to Increase the University of Nevada, Reno; Ahti Suo Anttila, Melting Rate of a High Aluminum Content Computational Engineering Analysis (USA) Waste Stimulant - 11640 A13. Aluminum Solubility, Part Two - 11369 Valery Romanovsky, Albert Aloy, Khlopin Jeff Lindner, Rebecca Toghiani, Yunju Xia, Radium Institute (Russia); Kevin Fox, James Laura Smith, Mississippi State University (USA) Marra, Savannah River National Laboratory A14. Wealth from Waste – Demonstration of (USA) Selective Removal of Cesium from A4. Pre-Project Activities Related to the Radioactive Wastes for Producing Blood Remediation of Fissionable Materials Irradiator Source Pencils - 11626 Contained in Standpipes at Atomic Energy RK Gupta, SB Patil, Sugilal Gopalakrishnan, of Canada Limited’s Whiteshell Jyoti Jha, KNS Nair, Daya Banerjee, Bhabha Laboratories - 11033 Atomic Research Centre; Piyush Srivastava, Terence Stepanik, Heidi McIlwain, Jamie Board of Radiation & Isotope Technology Edworthy, Shamsul Alam, Alex Man, Jason (India) Martino, Atomic Energy of Canada Limited; A15. Information Technologies for a More Peter Taylor, Acsion Industries Ltd (Canada) Transparent, Sustainable and Effective A5. Removal of Sludge Heels in Savannah Russian Radwaste Management Market - River Site Waste Tanks with Oxalic Acid - 11635 11226 Elena Yakovleva, Environmental Safety Michael Poirier, Savannah River National Journal (Russia) Laboratory; George Thaxton, Washington A16. Risk Ranking DOE Nuclear Facilities - Savannah River Company (USA) 11631 A6. Development of an Ultra-Sensitive, Real- Gustave Danielson, Joseph Arcano, Chip Time, Field-Deployable Mercury, Beryllium, Lagdon, US DOE (USA) and Multi-Contaminants Plasma Ringdown A17. Estimating Aerosol Generation at the Spectrometer - 11231 Hanford Tank Waste Treatment and Chuji Wang, Susan T. Scherrer, Peeyush Immobilization Plant (WTP) for Offgas Sahay, Mississippi State University (USA) Equipment Design Confirmation - 11643 A7. Design and Development of Innovative Kimberly Clossey, Ryan Wilson, Bechtel High-Level Waste Pipeline Unplugging National, Inc. (USA) Technologies - 11291 A18. The Using Of Ceramic Membrane Filters In David Roelant, Seckin Gokaltun, Dwayne The LRW Treatment Technologies At NPPs McDaniel, Jose Varona, Amer Awwad, Tomas - 11638 Pribanic, Florida International University (USA) Denis Fedorov, Arthur Arustamov, SIA Radon A8. Lessons Learned - UFP QAPP Development Institute (Russia) - 11313 A19. Treatment of Intermediate Level Wastes Steve Howard, MD Rahman, Cabrera Services, from Mo-99 Production - 11652 Inc. (USA) Martin Stewart, Sam Moricca, Daniel Brew,

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Melody Carter, Grant Beamish, James The WM Task Group will be focused on complex wide Chapman, Stephen Deen, Eric Vance, ANSTO; integration and technology transfer, while supporting Tina Eddowes, synrocANSTO (Australia) cost effective and efficient waste options. This will be achieved in a way that enhances complex wide A20. Transitioning into the Construction Phase communication and maintains a priority on safety, of the Port Hope Area Initiative: Canada’s environmental stewardship and security. Largest Low-Level Radioactive Waste Clean-up Project - 11654 Andrea Denby, Glenn Case, Christine Fahey, Session 88 Atomic Energy of Canada Limited (Canada); 8:30 AM – 12:00 PM Room 105A Tim Palmeter, Public Works Government Services Canada (Canada) Panel: Global Networking - Resources for Safer A21. D&D Progress at Portsmouth and Paducah and More Efficient Environmental Remediation Gaseous Diffusion Plants - 11657 William Franz, LATA Kentucky; Linda Bauer, LATA/Parallax Portsmouth, LLC (USA) Co-Chairs: Leo van Velzen, Nuclear Research & Consultancy Group (Netherlands); Michelle A22. System of Systems Engineering (SoSE) Rehmann, HER Creative Solutions, LLC (USA) Approach to Integrating Waste Lead Organizer and Panel Reporter: Michelle Management Program Elements - 11659 Rehmann Terry Kuykendall, Banda Group International Add’l Organizer: Horst Monken Fernandes (USA) A23. Getting Big Blue Out of Y-12 – 11205 This panel will focus on and is a follow-up from the Tim Poe, Y-12 National Security Complex WM2010 series on ENVIRONET - the IAEA Network (USA) on Environmental Management and Remediation. The A24. Non Destructive Compressive Strength network is actually promoting development of Measurement Of Low Level Solidified regulations, skills and training, technical outreach Waste In 200l And 329l Drums At The and funding needed to accomplish safer, more Waste Receipt And Inspection Facility sustainable and efficient remediation. The network (Wrif), Korea - 11676 will also transfer knowledge and lessons learned to Steve Halliwell, VJ Technologies (USA); Suk encourage improved life cycle planning of future Nam Lim, SooCheon Kwon, Korea projects and prevent generation of new legacy sites Radioactive Waste Management Corp. (Korea) with associates such as the International Forum on Sustainable Options for Uranium Protection. Progress in development of network projects will be March 3, Thursday AM presented.

Session 87 Panelists include: Leo van Velzen, The Nuclear Research & Consultancy Group (NRG), (Netherlands); 8:30 AM - 12:00 PM Room 106A Ana M. Han, US DOE (USA): Oleg Mansurov, Bocvhar Institute (Russia); Michael L. Dutura, The Panel: Waste Management Energy Facilities Ux. Consulting Company, LLC (Italy) and Oleg Contractor Operating Group (EFCOG) Meeting Voitsekhovych, Ukranian Hydrometerological Institute (Ukraine). Co-Chairs: W.T. (Sonny) Goldston, Savannah River Nuclear Solutions, LLC; Matt Frost, Y-12 National Session 89 Security Complex (USA) Lead Organizer: W.T. (Sonny) Goldston 8:30 AM - 12:00 PM Room 102B Add’l Organizer: Matt Frost Panel Reporter: Nancy Rothermich Panel: Advanced Used Fuel Recycling & Disposal Options for Shortening Institutional Control This panel will focus on the WM EFCOG and will meet Periods of Final Waste to a Few Hundred Years to discuss a variety of issues of importance to US DOE waste management operations. The purpose of Co-Chairs: Kun Jai Lee, KUSTAR (United Arab the WM EFCOG is to seek out and promote the best Emirates); Hamid Aït Abderrahim, SCK-CEN management and operating practices, cost effective (Belgium) technologies and disposal options for all waste Lead Organizer and Panel Reporter: Kun Jai Lee streams generated at US DOE facilities; whether Add’l Organizer: Il-Soon Hwang destined for US DOE or commercial facilities.

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This panel will address advanced Used Fuel Recycling 11206 & Disposal Options. Recent progress in advanced Rudy Jolly, Savannah River Remediation, LLC technology for spent fuel partitioning, transmutation (USA) and deep geological repository design can lead to 9:50 Corrosion Rates of 1-WT% vs. 8-WT% innovative waste management approaches Oxalic Acid on Savannah River Site characterized by significantly shortened institutional Carbon Steel Liquid Radioactive Waste control periods. In some cases the institutional Tanks - 11413 control period (ICP) can be shortened to several Edward Ketusky, Karthik Subramanian, hundred years, with the help of drastically reduced Savannah River Remediation, LLC; Bruce amount of long-living radio-isotopes, heat load and Wiersma, Savannah River National Laboratory waste volume. Technical, economical and institutional (USA) viability of this sort of innovative approach will be the discussion of this panel. 10:15 Break - Optional 10:20 Inhibited Release of Mobile Contaminants Discussion & path forward will be moderated by H. from Hanford Tank Residual Waste - Ait Abderrahim, SCK-CEN (Belgium). Panelists 11447 and topics include: Kirk Cantrell, Bruce Arey, Michael Lindberg, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory; Steve 1. Aqueous Partitioning – Dominique Heald, Argonne National Laboratory (USA) Warin, CEA (France) 10:45 Demonstration of Quantitative Waste Volume Determination Technique for 2. Pyrochemical Partitioning – TBA Hanford Waste Tank Closure - 11139 3. Transmutation Technologies – H. Ait David Monts, Ping-Rey Jang, Zhiling Long, Abderrahim, SCK-CEN (Belgium) Walter P. Okhuysen, O. Perry Norton, Mississippi State University (USA) 4. Geological Disposal of LLW/ILW – I.S. 11:10 Progress towards Closure of Material Hwang, SNU (Republic of Korea) Disposition: Area G at the Los Alamos 5. Deep Borehole Disposal of HLW – Patrick National Laboratory - 11472 Brady, SNL Mark Shepard, James S. Clemmons, Kathryn Johns-Hughes, Los Alamos National 6. Institutional Issues – Regulation, Laboratory (USA) Safeguards and Security – M.J. Song, KRIA (Republic of Korea) Session 91 Session 90 8:30 AM - 10:15 AM Room 106B 8:30 AM - 12:00 PM Room 101C Program Management Improvements Through Closure of HLW, SNF/UNF, and Long-lived Risk Management Innovations Alpha/TRU Facilities Co-Chairs: Christopher Timm, PECOS Management Co-Chairs: Martin Letourneau, US DOE; John Services, Inc.; Sherry M. Keeney, PECOS Greeves, Talisman International, LLC (USA) Management Services, Inc. (USA) Lead Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Martin Lead Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Christopher Letourneau Timm Add’l Organizer: John Greeves Add’l Organizer(s): Neil Davis, Gerald Williams

8:35 Performance Assessment Inventory 8:35 Sustainable Waste Management Planning - Considerations at Savannah River Site - 11181 11322 Mona L. Johnson, Bechtel Jacobs Company Ben Dean, Savannah River Remediation, LLC LLC; Tammy Phillips, CDM (USA) (USA) 9:00 Risk Identification and the Quantification 9:00 Basis for Section 3116 Determination for of Sustainability - Comprehensive Financial Closure of F-Tank Farm at the Savannah Cost Benefit Analysis that Includes River Site - 11177 Environmental and Social Costs - 11553 Larry Romanowski, Savannah River James Farrow, WorleyParsons (USA) Remediation, LLC (USA) 9:25 Taking Risk Assessment and Management 9:25 Status of Tank Residual Characterization to the Next Level: Program-Level Risk Sampling to Support Waste Tank Analysis to Enable Solid Decision-Making Operational Closure at the Savannah on Priorities and Funding - 11563 River Site: Tank Farm Closure Project - Jerel Nelson, R. Lee Morton, Natalie Johnson,

72 Thursday AM

Carlos Castillo, George Dyer, WorleyParsons Session 93 Polestar; James McSwain, Terragraphics (USA) 8:30 AM - 10:15 AM Room 106C 9:50 Managing Risk During the Execution Phase of DOE Projects - 11245 Glass Formulation and Melter Development Michael Kopp, Shaw Environmental & Infrastructure, Inc. (USA) Co-Chairs: James Marra, Savannah River National Laboratory; Christian Ladirat, CEA (France) Session 92 Lead Organizer: Tom Brouns 10:15 AM - 12:00 PM Room 106B Add’l Organizer(s): Ned Bibler, Gordon Crawford Paper Reviewer: Terri Fellinger Improved Flowsheets for Processing of TRU and HLW 8:35 Technology Development to Reduce Mission Life, Life Cycle Costs and Glass Co-Chairs: Andrew Fellinger, Savannah River Volumes for US High Level Waste National Laboratory; Sal Golub, US DOE (USA) Vitrification Facilities - 11461 Lead Organizer: Bernard Vigreux David Peeler, Savannah River National Add’l Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Robert Jubin Laboratory (USA) 9:00 Developing Model to Formulate High-Level 10:20 Development of the Next-Generation Radioactive Waste Glass for the Hanford Caustic-Side Solvent Extraction (NG- WTP (Waste Treatment and CSSX) Process for Cesium Removal from Immobilization Plant) - 11383 High-Level Tank Waste - 11346 Rod Gimpel, Waste Treatment Plant Project Bruce Moyer, Oak Ridge National Laboratory; (USA) Peter Bonnesen, Lætitia Delmau, Frederick 9:25 Development of the Next Generation Sloop, Neil Williams, Joseph Birdwell, Denise Melter for the Hanford Site - 11049 L. Lee, Oak Ridge National Laboratory; Ralph Gene Ramsey, Michael Gray, Ron Calmus, Leonard, Argonne National Laboratory; Benjamin Garrett, Washington River Protection Samuel Fink, Savannah River Nuclear Solutions (USA) Solutions, LLC; Thomas P. Peters, Savannah 9:50 Formation Mechanisms of the Needle- River National Laboratory; Mark Geeting, Shaped Crystal of Ruthenium Dioxide Savannah River Remediation, LLC (USA) During Vitrification of Nitric Acid Solution 10:45 Development and Testing of Two Novel Containing Nitrosyl Ruthenium Nitrate - and Vitrification Compatible Classes of 11265 Ion Specific Media for Application on the Youichi Enokida, Kayo Sawada, Takahiro Hanford Waste Treatment Plant Shimada, Daisuke Hirabayashi, Nagoya Supplemental Pretreatment and University (Japan) Secondary Waste Streams - 11001 Mark Denton, Kurion, Inc.; William Bostick, Session 94 Materials and Chemistry Laboratory, Inc. (USA) 10:15 AM - 12:00 PM Room 106C 11:10 Further Development of Modified Monosodium Titanate, an Improved Stabilization for Legacy Waste Sorbent for Pretreatment of High Level Nuclear Waste at the Savannah River Site Co-Chairs: James Marra, Savannah River National - 11215 Laboratory; Christian Ladirat, CEA (France) David Hobbs, Kathryn Taylor-Pashow, Lead Organizer: Tom Brouns Fernando Fondeur, Savannah River National Add’l Organizer(s): Ned Bibler, Gordon Crawford Laboratory; Samuel Fink, Savannah River Paper Reviewer: Terri Fellinger Nuclear Solutions, LLC (USA) 11:35 The Suitability of Sodium Peroxide Fusion 10:20 Uranium Metal Oxidation, Grinding and for Production-Scale Plutonium Excapsulation in BoroBond™: TRU Waste Processing Operations - 11179 Management - 11223 Robert Pierce, Savannah River National Kevin Cook, Larry Addington, Elizabeth Utley, Laboratory (USA) Ceradyne Boron Products, LLC (USA) 10:45 Stabilization of Hanford K-Basin Sludge by Dissolution of Uranium Metal with Carbonate / Peroxide Solution - 11210 Stuart Arm, Chris Phillips, Carina Mitchell,

73 Thursday AM

EnergySolutions; Stephanie Bruffey, Paul Croft, Howard O. Menlove, M.T. Swinhoe, Los Taylor, Oak Ridge National Laboratory (USA) Alamos National Laboratory (USA); Taehoon 11:10 Portable and Modular Cementation Lee, Korea Atomic Energy Research Institute Systems for Stabilization of Nuclear (Republic of Korea) Waste - 11367 9:50 Characterization of the Hanford 324 Gordon Crawford, Rich Martin, Sam Pearson, Building B Cell - 11081 EnergySolutions (USA) Walter Josephson, WorleyParsons Polestar 11:35 Capture and Immobilization of (USA) Technetium from Liquid Radioactive 10:15 Break - Optional Waste Streams into a Stable Goethite 10:20 Ultrasonic Techniques for the In Situ Mineral Form - 11351 Characterization of Nuclear Waste Joseph Westsik, Wooyong Um, Nikolla Sludges - 11275 Qafoku, Gary Josephson, Jeffrey Serne, Pacific Timothy Hunter, Simon Biggs, Michael Northwest National Laboratories (USA) Fairweather, Jeff Peakall, University of Leeds (United Kingdom) Session 95 10:45 Low-Level Cementitious Waste Sample 8:30 AM - 12:00 PM Room 103A Retrieval and Analysis at Savannah River Site - 11149 Aaron Staub, Savannah River Remediation, Waste Characterization for LLW, ILW, MW - LLC; Alex Cozzi, Dale Marzolf, Savannah River Non-Ionizing Radiation Methods National Laboratory (USA) 11:10 Disposal of Nuclear Graphite - 11043 Co-Chairs: Stephen Croft, Los Alamos National Natalia Girke, Katharina Aymanns, Dirk Laboratory; Frazier Bronson, Canberra Industries, Bosbach, Research Centre Jülich GmbH; Hans- Inc. (USA) Jürgen Steinmetz, Forschungszentrum Jülich Lead Organizer: Heinz Kroeger GmbH (Germany) Add’l Organizer: Frazier Bronson Paper Reviewer: Stephen Croft Session 96 8:35 A Technical Review of Non-destructive 8:30 AM - 12:00 PM Room 103B Assay Research for the Characterization of Spent Nuclear Fuel Assemblies Being Transportation Impacts on State, Tribal and Conducted Under The US DOE NGSI - Local Jurisdictions 11544 Stephen Croft, Jeremy Conlin, Louise Evans, Co-Chairs: Ella McNeil, US DOE; Daniel Jordan, Corey Freeman, Jianwei Hu, Adrienne LaFleur, Enercon Services, Inc. (USA) Howard O. Menlove, Vladimir Mozin, M.A. Lead Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Ella McNeil Schear, M.T. Swinhoe, Stephen J. Tobin, Holly Add’l Organizer(s): Larry Harmon, Daniel Jordan Trellue, Los Alamos National Laboratory; Luke Campbell, Chris Gesh, L. Eric Smith, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory; Jesse 8:35 DOE Partnerships with States, Tribes and Cheatham, Mike Ehinger, Cathy Romano, Oak Other Federal Programs Help Responders Ridge National Laboratory; David Chichester, Prepare for Challenges Involving James Sterbentz, Idaho National Laboratory; Transport of Radioactive Materials - Alan Hunt, Idaho State University; Bernhard 11038 Ludewigt, Lawrence Berkeley National Tom Clawson, Ken Keaton, Technical Laboratory (USA); Taehoon Lee, Korea Atomic Resources Group, Inc.; Marsha Keister, Idaho Energy Research Institute (Republic of Korea) National Laboratory (USA) 9:00 A New MCNPX PTRAC Coincidence 9:00 Radiological Transportation Accidents Capture File Capability: A Tool for from A Responder’s Perspective - 11362 Neutron Detector Design - 11432 John Riley, John Lund, Tom Clawson, Louise Evans, M.A. Schear, John Hendricks, Technical Resources Group, Inc. (USA) M.T. Swinhoe, Stephen J. Tobin, Stephen 9:25 Simulated Response of a One-PWR Croft, Los Alamos National Laboratory (USA) Package to the Caldecott Tunnel Fire 9:25 The Optimization of Combined Delayed Scenario - 11573 Neutron and Differential Die-Away Miles Greiner, Narayana Rao Chalasani, Prompt Neutron Signal Detection for University of Nevada, Reno; Ahti Suo Anttila, Characterization of Spent Nuclear Fuel Computational Engineering Analysis (USA) Assemblies - 11419 Pauline Blanc, Stephen J. Tobin, Stephen

74 Thursday AM

9:50 Yucca Mountain Transportation Planning: Contaminated Waste Sites on the Nevada Lessons Learned, 1984-2009 - 11256 Test Site - 11154 Robert Halstead, State of Nevada Agency for Mark Krauss, S.M. Stoller Corporation; Kevin Nuclear Projects; James Ballard, California Cabble, US DOE; Patrick Matthews, Navarro State University, Northridge; Fred Dilger, Nevada Environmental Services (USA) Black Mountain Research (USA) 11:10 Characterizing Inorganic Scintillation 10:20 Impacts of a Severe Road Tunnel Fire on Detectors for Determining Radiation Transportation of Spent Nuclear Fuel Exposure - 11358 - 11583 Ronald Unz, Donna Rogers, Charles Earl Easton, Christopher Bajwa, US NRC; T. Waggoner, Mississippi State University (USA) Mintz, K. Das, J. Huczek, Southwest Research Institute (USA) Session 98 8:30 AM - 12:00 PM Room 101B Session 97 8:30 AM - 12:00 PM Room 104B ER Post Closure Challenges and Long Term Stewardship/Legacy Management Application of Innovative D&D Technologies Co-Chairs: Dale Bignell, Washington Closure Co-Chairs: Rick Demmer, Idaho National Hanford; Thomas Pauling, US DOE (USA) Laboratory; Anthony Banford, National Nuclear Lead Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Dale Bignell Laboratory (United Kingdom) Add’l Organizer: Thomas Pauling Lead Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Rick Demmer Add’l Organizer: J. Rick Dearholt 8:35 Weldon Spring Disposal Cell Performance: The First Ten Years - 11333 8:35 Remote Surveys of the BN-350 Fast Jane Powell, Vijendra Kothari, US DOE; Breeder Reactor Refueling Pathway Rebecca Cato, R.G., Yvonne Deyo, Randy (Aktau, Kazakhstan) - 11061 Thompson, Terri Uhlmeyer, S.M. Stoller David Wells, Ian Adsley, Andrew Herrick, Corporation (USA) Nuvia Limited (United Kingdom); Collin J 9:00 Status and Performance of the On-Site Knight, Idaho National Laboratory; Anatoliy Disposal Facility, Fernald Preserve, Ivanov, Alexander Klepikov, Sergey Cincinnati, Ohio - 11137 Pustobayev, Igor Yakovlev, Nuclear Jane Powell, US DOE; Frank Johnston, Technology Safety Center (Kazakhstan) William Hertel, Ken Broberg, S.M. Stoller 9:00 A Proven Method for Performing Steam Corporation (USA) Dryer Segmentation on BWR Plants 9:25 River Corridor Contract - WHC’s - 11479 (Washington Closure Hanford) Road Map Joseph Boucau, Westinghouse Electric to Closure - 11450 Company, LLC (Belgium); Stefan Fallstrom, Ella Feist, Washington Closure Hanford; Dana Per Segerud, Westinghouse Electric Company, Bryson, US DOE (USA) LLC (Sweden); Paul Kreitman, Westinghouse 9:50 Regulatory Actions to Improve the Electric Company, LLC (USA) Management of Uranium Mining Waste in 9:25 Submerged Water Jet Decontamination of France - 11070 Multi-Element Bottles - 11521 Jean Luc Lachaume, Nuclear Safety Alex Jenkins, Sellafield Limited (UK) Authority (France) 9:50 Remote System for Characterizing, 10:15 Break - Optional Monitoring and Inspecting the Inside of 10:20 Monitored Natural Attenuation (MNA): Is Contaminated Nuclear Stacks - 11567 Past Performance an Indication of Future Mario Vargas, William Mendez, Leonel Lagos, Results? - 11222 Florida International University; Mark Noakes, Mark Kautsky, US DOE; Laura Cummins, Randall Lind, Peter Lloyd, John Rowe, François Stan Morrison, Dave M. Peterson, Timothy Pin, Oak Ridge National Laboratory (USA) Bartlett, S.M. Stoller Corporation (USA) 10:15 Break - Optional 10:45 Design and Installation of a Disposal Cell 10:20 Brookhaven Graphite Research Reactor Cover Field Test - 11317 (BGRR) D&D Project - 11243 Richard Bush, US DOE (USA) Bill Kirby, S.A. Technology (USA) 11:10 Assessing the Impacts of the Mercury 10:45 Nuclear Operations Application to Export Ban Act of 2008 on the U.S. Environmental Restoration at Corrective Mercury Recycling Industry - 11163 Action Unit 547, Miscellaneous Cliff Carpenter, US DOE (USA)

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11:35 Balancing Institutional Controls and 10:20 Workforce Development for the Nuclear Beneficial Reuse at US DOE Office of Industry – A Global Issue - 11332 Legacy Management Sites - 11133 Leonel Lagos, Florida International University Steve Schiesswohl, Laura E. Kilpatrick, Esq., (USA) US DOE; Cheri Bahrke, S.M. Stoller 10:45 Challenges and Best Practices Learned in Corporation (USA) Twelve Years of Leading a University based Engineering Summer Camp for Session 99 Middle School Students - 11382 Philip O'Leary, Carl Vieth, University of 8:30 AM - 10:15 AM Room 104A Wisconsin (USA) 11:10 Keeping Score Using Automated Charts Communication of Technical Issues for Performance Improvement - 11311 Robert Trivett, Savannah River Site (USA) Co-Chairs: Holly Bowers, Washington State 11:35 Virtual Facility Tours as a Communication University; Sonya Johnson, CH2M HILL PRC (USA) Tool - 11581 Lead Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Elizabeth Laurence Pernot, Jan Phillips, AREVA (USA) Bowers Add’l Organizer: W.T. (Sonny) Goldston March 3, Thursday PM 8:35 Texas’ Efforts to Increase Nuclear Technology Workforce - 11407 Session 101 Kenneth Krieger, Linda Morris, Texas State Technical College (USA) 1:00 PM - 5:45 PM Room 102ABC 9:00 DOE's Office of Environmental Management's Compliance Community of US NRC/US DOE/IAEA LLW Performance Practice Provides Framework to Promote Assessment, the Safety Case (PRISM) and Long Dynamic Communication Among Term Monitoring Workshop Compliance Professionals and Stakeholders - 11469 Co-Chairs: Larry Camper, US NRC; Connie Lorenz, US DOE (USA) Christine Gelles, US DOE (USA) 9:25 Sharing & Deploying Innovative Information Technology Solutions to This workshop will focus on common approaches, Manage Waste Across the DOE Complex - methods, and tools used in performance assessment 11309 to demonstrate compliance with dose/risk criteria for Regina Crolley, Mike Thompson, Savannah LLW disposal facilities. Discussions will also include River Nuclear Solutions, LLC; Terry Wentz, the international approach regarding use of the Mission Support Alliance, LLC; Dean Newton, safety case concept for LLW disposal facilities and Turnkey Transportation Services (USA) IAEA activities pertaining to the project on Practical Illustration and use of the Safety Case Concept in the 9:50 Waste Information Management System – Management of Near-Surface Disposal (PRISM). LLW 2011 - 11303 long-term monitoring aspects will also be addressed. Himanshu Upadhyay, Walter Quintero, Peggy The proposed agenda and panelists include: Shoffner, Leonel Lagos, David Roelant, Florida International University (USA) 1. Opening Remarks and Presentation of Panel Speakers - Larry Camper, US NRC and Christine Session 100 Gelles, US DOE 10:15 AM - 12:00 PM Room 104A 2. Technical Basis of 10 CFR Part 61 LLW Classification System – Matthew Kozak, INTERA, Training, Education, Knowledge Management INC and Communication for Safety and Performance 3. NRC Recommended Approach for Co-Chairs: Jeannette Hyatt, Savannah River Performance Assessment Methodology for LLW Nuclear Solutions, LLC; Margaret MacDonell, Disposal - Boby Abu-Eid, US NRC Argonne National Laboratory (USA) Lead Organizer and Paper Reviewer: Margaret 4. Computational Tools Codes/Models Used by MacDonell NRC Staff for LLW Risk Analysis & Examples - Add’l Organizer(s): Jeannette Hyatt, Michelle David Esh, US NRC Barker

76 Friday AM

5. Current Issues in Part 61 Waste agencies’ positions, future plans, and specific views Classification System - A Proposal to Risk- regarding LLW management framework. The panel Inform US LLW Classification System - Michael will also address public and stakeholder suggestions Ryan, ACRS and comments.

6. An Overview of IAEA PRISM - Christine The public and stakeholders, as well as WM2011 Gelles, US DOE participants are encouraged to take this opportunity of participating in the DOE/NRC joint meeting and 7. Use of the IAEA Safety Case Concept in discussions. Admission to the Friday joint meeting is Management of Near-Surface Disposal: PRISM free of charge. Components and Approaches - G. Bruno, IAEA

8. Performance Assessment and LLW Disposal – Conference Proceedings EPRI’s Perspective – Lisa Edwards/David James, EPRI The conference technical program proceedings are included with a full technical registration. Following 9. Overview of DOE’s Performance Assessment the conclusion of the Conference, approximately June Methodology for LLW Disposal, Roger Seitz, 2011, attendees will be mailed a CD-Rom of the SRNL/US DOE Conference Proceedings to the address listed on their registration materials. 10. Open Discussion For additional copies or for those attendees who are 11. Brief Technical Summary – Boby Abu-Eid, US not full technical registrants, Conference Proceedings NRC may be purchased for $105 each.

12. Closing Remarks - Larry Camper, US NRC and Also, proceedings for previous conference, the years Christine Gelles, US DOE 2002 – 2010, are available for $105 each. Please stop by the Registration Desk for an order form. After the Workshop, a reception open to all workshop participants will follow at the PCC from 5:45 PM to Proceeding Archives are also available online at 6:45 PM. www.wmsym.org for the previous years 2001 – 2009. The website is one year behind the conference, WM2010 proceedings will be posted March 4, Friday online once the WM2011 proceedings are mailed.

DOE/NRC Public Meeting 8:30 AM – 5:30 PM

The US DOE and the US NRC will be holding an all Notes day joint public meeting at the Hyatt Regency Phoenix Hotel to discuss plans for revisions or updates of their respective directives or regulatory framework for management of LLW. The all-day joint meeting will be organized in two Sessions (one for each agency), followed by a joint “Panel Discussion” Session.

Session I will address DOE Order 435.1 (Radioactive Waste Management), and includes presentations by a DOE key note speaker and DOE staff. It will also include a period for public and stakeholder feedback and comments.

Session II will address the NRC’s proposal to initiate revision of 10 CFR Part 61(Licensing Requirements for Land Disposal of Radioactive Waste) as discussed in the NRC SECY-10-0165. Session II will also include presentations by an NRC key note speaker and NRC staff.

The joint workshop will conclude with a joint DOE/NRC Panel Discussion to respond and explain

77 POSTER SESSIONS Be sure to visit the technical posters on display throughout the day. Posters are located on the first floor with the technical sessions.

In this informal atmosphere, Poster Presenters become discussion leaders sharing their ideas and visions. Each technical track presents a poster session; see the session descriptions for more information.

The WM2011 posters will be displayed approximately 3-1/2 hours and authors are scheduled to be at the booths for one 30-minute period and one 60-minute period.

In order to honor high quality presentations at WM2011, the American Nuclear Society (ANS) presents an award for the Best Poster/Paper and the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) provides an award for the runner–up.

Judges select the poster/paper based on technical quality and preparation of the work as described in the guidelines. Attendee forms for judging posters will also be available in the area and must be turned in one hour before the session ends. Each track selects the best poster/paper which are then displayed and re-judged on Wednesday afternoon for the Best and Second Best of the conference. The Best and Second Best in the conference for WM2011 are presented to the recipients at the next WM conference, WM2012. The "Best Poster Awards" from last year will be presented at the Honors & Awards Luncheon on Tuesday, March 1, 2011.

Poster Session Schedule and Author Attendance at Poster

Poster Authors present Authors present Poster Poster Removal Session # Period -First Period- -Second Period- Setup

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 2011 1 – Afternoon 25 1:30 – 5 pm 1:30 – 2 pm 4 – 5 pm 1:30 pm 5 – 5:30 pm

TUESDAY, MARCH 1, 2011 8:30 am – 8 – Morning 39 12 pm 8:30 – 9 am 11 am – 12 pm 8:30 am 12 – 12:30 pm 1 – Afternoon 55 1:30 – 5 pm 1:30 – 2 pm 4 – 5 pm 1:30 pm 5 – 5:30 pm

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 2, 2011 8:30 am – 11:30 am – 8 – Morning 70 12:30 pm 8:30 – 9 am 12:30 pm 8:30 am 12:30 – 1 pm 1 – Afternoon 86 1:30 – 5 pm 1:30 – 2 pm 4 – 5 pm 1:30 pm 5 – 5:30 pm

Student Posters – Session 26 The Next Generation – Industry Leaders of Tomorrow

Be sure to visit the Student Posters display in the Exhibit Hall on Monday, February 28, 2011 and vote for your selection for Best Student Poster. The winning student will be presented with $500 cash at the Tuesday Honors and Awards Luncheon.

78 WM2011 Authors Index Session in Bold followed by the Paper Number

A Barinov, Alexandr - 39E-11156 Boucau, Joseph - 97-11479 Aaron, W.S. - 77-11116 Barnabas, Istvan - 25A-11184 Bourque, Hugh - 66-11286 Abdushukurov, Dzhamshed- 30-11481 Barone, Frank - 30-11280 Bowan, Bradley - 44-11131 Abercrombie, Robert - 41-11340 Bartlett, Timothy - 98-11222 Bower, Bryan - 71-11203 Abitz, Richard - 29-11533 Basabilvazo, George - 78-11374 Boyer, Brian - 25A-11433 Abkowitz, Mark - 31-11057 Bauer, Linda - 86-11657 Brachmann, Noreen - 5-11064 Abramov, Alexander - 18-11266 Beamish, Grant - 86-11652 Brady, Lee - 26-11664 Acevedo, Cristian - 22-11389 Beck, Travis - 19-11364 Brammer, Klaus-Jürgen - 79-11517 Adams, George - 83-11582 Becker, Naomi - 23-11161 Brandjes, Christopher - 35-11425 Adams, Lori - 55D-11467 Beckett, Elizabeth M. - 26-11629 Brandys, Marek - 44-11458 Addington, Larry - 94-11223 Beckman, John - 67-11536 Brautigam, Todd S - 52-11003 Adkins, Harold - 64-11121, 83-11392 Belencan, Helen - 9-11052 Brede, Lawrence- 35-11196, 81-11077 Adsley, Ian - 97-11061 Beller, Barbara - 29-11537 Breedlove, William - 23-11508 Agnew, Stephen - 55B-11565, 86- Bellini, Maria Helena - 39A-11130 Bremer, Simon - 7-11284 11605 Bellis, Mark - 71-11113 Brennecke, Peter - 5-11441, 18- Agrawal, Anoop - 55D-11467 Ben Ayad, Saïd - 50-11025 11442, 39B-11556 Ahn, Byung-Gil - 39D-11165 Benamane, Ahmed - 70E-11225 Brenner, Eliot - 24-11080 Ahromeev, Sergey - 30-11520 Benedict, Barry - 26-11633 Bresee, James - 8-11564 Akutsu, Shigeru - 39A-11078 Benitez, Liliana - 24-11321 Brett, Dena - 53-11409 Al-Qudah, Omar - 23-11489, 26- BenKinney, Marie - 39D-11623 Brew, Daniel - 86-11652 11633, 11649 Benson, Craig - 31-11057 Bricker, Jonathan - 44-11458 Alam, Shamsul - 86-11033 Bercik, Lisa - 68-11375 Bridges, Donald - 85-11188 Alchowiak, Justine - 30-11500 Bergmann, Wolfgang - 70B-11111 Briest, John - 55B-11324 Alderman, Neil - 19-11195 Bergren, Christopher - 9-11052 Broberg, Ken - 98-11137 Alekseev, Mikhail - 39E-11525 Berry, Joanne - 25B-11248 Brock, Chris - 68-11504, 11505 Aleman, Sebastian - 33-11228 Betancourt, Amaury - 26-11663 Bronson, Frazier - 51-11182, 11398 Alexander, George - 80-11323 Bhatt, Chhavi Raj - 26-11645 Brown, Garrett - 33-11379 Aloy, Albert - 86-11640 Bhavaraju, Sai - 39A-11342 Brown, Julie - 24-11321 Ambos, Frank - 39A-11268 Bickford, Jody - 84-11029 Brown, Kevin - 41-11446, 11444, 48- Amor, Alejandro - 70F-11298 Biebesheimer, Fred - 23-11507 11443, 65-11546 Anderson, Gary - 70E-11225 Biggs, Simon - 39C-11098, 52-11097, Brown, Steven - 16-11438 Anderson, John - 55F-11230 95-11275 Brown, Steven J. - 33-11327 Anderson, Scott - 45-11055 Biloski, William - 43-11212 Bruffey, Stephanie - 94-11210 Angeli, Frederic - 44-11502 Bindokas, Antanas - 5-11064 Brumwell, Frank - 5-11064 Anghel, Vinicius - 82-11341 Birchfield, Joseph - 35-11218, 50- Bruno, Gerard - 65-11190 Arafat, Yasir - 76-11390 11209 Brusa, Luigi - 18-1153 Arakali, Aruna - 10-11143 Birdsell, Kay - 30-11545 Bryson, Dana - 98-11450 Arcano, Joseph - 86-11631 Birdwell, Joseph - 92-11346 Bunn, Amoret - 29-11513, 86-11454 Arcuri Filho, Rogério - 39F-11150 Bittner, Bryan - 26-11630 Burger, Joanna - 55E-11386 Arey, Bruce - 90-11447 Biwer, Bruce - 69-11540 Buriev, Nazirzhon - 30-11481 Arlt, Hans - 80-11323 Black, Doug - 67-11118 Burket, Paul - 77-11593 Arm, Stuart - 94-11210 Blackford, Ty - 45-11445 Burmeister, Mark - 55B-11114 Arnold, Patrick - 34-11082 Blanc, Pauline - 95-11419 Burns, Carolyn - 64-11121 Arustamov, Arthur - 20-11470, 66- Blanchard, David - 33-11377 Burns, Dan - 16-11627 11050, 86-11417, 11638 Blankenhorn, James - 71-11203 Burns, Heather - 48-11443 Ashbaugh, Andrew - 45-11329 Blankenship, John - 36-11620 Burritt, Jim - 43-11468 Asi, Eugene - 55E-11480 Boatwright, Wesley - 78-11374 Busch, Günter - 55E-11480 Ausmus, Clint - 77-11116 Boehlecke, Robert - 30-11153, 68- Buschman, Nancy - 8-11478, 29- Awwad, Amer - 25B-11289, 86-11291 11557 11537 Aylward, Robert - 29-11513 Boes, Chris - 67-11418 Bush, Richard - 98-11317 Aymanns, Katharina - 95-11043 Boesing, Tanja - 39A-11268 Bush, Sheryl Ross - 29-11529, 11531 Boetsch, Wilma - 5-11441, 39B-11556 Butala, Stephen - 5-11064 B Bolshov, Leonid - 18-11266, 32- Butez, Marc - 8-11034 Bae, Jung - 55C-11067 11142, 11269, 11134, 11147 Butler, Theresa - 44-11131 Bahrke, Cheri - 98-11133 Bonhomme, Gaetan - 39A-11396 Byrnes, Mark - 23-11508 Baik, Min-Hoon - 55A-11578 Bonnesen, Peter - 92-11346 Bytwerk, David - 32-11515 Bajwa, Christopher - 83-11582, 11392, Bontha, Jagannadha - 64-11121 11391, 96-11583 Boomer, Kayle - 19-11335 C Balagopal, Shekar - 39A-11342 Booth, Steven - 78-11087 Cabble, Kevin - 55B-11155, 11114, Ballard, James - 96-11256 Borba, Tânia Regina - 39A-11130 70F-11157, 97-11154 Ballard, John - 31-11534 Boriskin, Mikhail - 80-11451 Cai, Yong - 68-11559 Banerjee, Daya - 86-11626 Borlaug, William - 55B-11324 Calderin, Duriem - 70F-11298 Banford, Anthony - 36-11587, 52- Bosbach, Dirk - 95-11043 Calmus, Ron - 93-11049 11588 Bosgiraud, Jean-Michel - 79-11005 Calvin, Anthony - 66-11125 Bannochie, Christopher - 77-11593 Bosko, Andrey - 51-11398 Campbell, Luke - 95-11544 Barile, Lisa - 54-11083 Bostick, William - 92-11001 Camper, Larry - 81-11617

79 WM2011 Authors Index Session in Bold followed by the Paper Number

Cange, Susan - 43-11328, 55F-11628 Coggins, Terry L. - 97-11358 Denby, Andrea - 86-11654 Cannell, Gary - 43-11580 Cohen, Bruce - 35-11425 Denham, Miles - 31-11560 Cantrell, Kirk - 90-11447 Colbert, Richard - 26-11653 DeNovio, Nicole - 23-11161 Carelli, Mario - 8-11452, 76-11390 Cole, Matt - 70D-11312 Denslow, Kayte - 64-11121 Carilli, Jhon - 48-11120 Coleman, Justin - 22-11514 Denton, Mark - 39A-11396, 92-11001 Carlsson, Jan - 36-11483 Collazo, Yvette - 29-11529, 11526 Devgun, Jas - 36-11092 Carpenter, Cliff - 98-11163 Collins, Emory - 76-11336, 77-11116 Deyo, Yvonne - 54-11338, 98-11333 Carpentier, Benoit - 44-11482 Collopy, Peter - 53-11296 Di Sanza, Frank - 34-11082, 11151 Carter, Chris - 25A-11184 Conant, John - 48-11387, 66-11388 Dials, George - 4-11247 Carter, Melody - 86-11652 Conley, Thomas - 26-11653, 70D- Dias, Fabiana - 49-11076 Carvajal, Denny - 55A-11345, 55D- 11199 Diener, Glenn - 44-11458 11422 Conlin, Jeremy - 95-11544 Dilger, Fred - 96-11256 Case, Glenn - 86-11654 Cook, Amy - 55C-11361 Dimenna, Richard - 65-11075 Castello, Charles- 23-11042, 68-11559 Cook, Kevin - 94-11223 Dinis, Maria de Lurdes - 65-11607 Castillo, Carlos - 43-11562, 91-11563 Corbett, John - 19-11364 Dionne, Marc - 31-11320 Catlow, Renee - 45-11445 Cordingley, Leon - 36-11587 Dmitriev, Sergey - 20-11470 Cato, R.G., Rebecca - 98-11333 Cordova, Elsa - 84-11029 Dodge, Robert - 39D-11000 Cauchies, Sophie - 50-11025 Cornils, Kristine - 34-11499 Doherty, John - 78-11374 Cercy, Michael - 29-11513 Corrado, Paul - 22-11036 Donakowski, Joseph - 67-11429 Ceto III, Nicholas - 53-11592 Cotton, Thomas - 76-11008 Donkin, Julia - 83-11542 Chabalala, Simphiwe - 39A-11575, Cournoyer, Michael - 39D-11000 Dooley, Kirk - 22-11514 39E-11576 Covert, Bruce - 55C-11371 Dorries, Alison - 34-11334, 45-11329 Chalasani, Narayana Rao - 86-11574, Cox, Lisa - 26-11641 Downey, Heath - 48-11387, 53-11296, 96-11573 Cozzi, Alex - 77-11593, 95-11149 66-11388 Chamberlain, John - 71-11138 Craig, Brian - 55F-11230 Drake, John - 69-11099 Chamberlain, Skip - 29-11513, 11526, Crawford, Charles - 77-11593 Du, Qian - 68-11310 11535, 84-11074 Crawford, Gordon - 94-11367 Dua, Surendra - 70F-11298 Chang, Fon-Chieh - 83-11016 Croft, Stephen - 25A-11433, 39B- Duffey, Kean - 39A-11342 Chapman, James - 86-11652 11548, 95-11419, 11544, 11432 Duignan, Mark - 33-11189 Charboneau, Briant - 84-11074 Crolley, Regina - 99-11309 Dulikravich, George - 86-11552 Charrin, Nicolas - 24-11060 Cronin, John - 55D-11467 Duncan, Garth - 64-11381 Charton, Frederic - 80-11072 Crosby, Dave - 58-11586 Duncan, Zachary - 76-11008 Chauvin, Eric - 44-11482 Cummins, Laura - 67-11319, 98- Dupuis, Marie-Claude - 79-11013 Chavda, Mehul - 39A-11484 11222 Dutzer, Michel - 80-11554 Chavez, Art - 63-11238 Cunnane, James - 77-11348 Dux, Joachim - 66-11278, 70E-11095 Chavez, Rick - 78-11374 Cuta, Judith - 83-11392 Dvoretskaya, Olga - 32-11142, 11134 Cheatham, Jesse - 95-11544 Cuthbertson, Abigail - 34-11424 Dyer, George - 91-11563 Chekhmir, Anatoly - 25D-11093 Czerwinski, Ken - 26-11453 Chen, Jin - 33-11440 E Chen, Jing - 33-11440 D Easton, Earl - 83-11392, 11391, Chen, S.Y. - 5-11064, 69-11540, D'Amico, Eric - 78-11374 11582, 96-11583 11035, 83-11610 Dalton, John - 4-11435 Eberlein, Susan - 84-11074 Cheng, Jing-Jy - 5-11064 Damerval, Frederique - 70E-11225 Ebert, Joseph - 71-11127 Cheremisin, Peter - 80-11451 Daniel, Gene - 77-11593 Eddowes, Tina - 86-11652 Chesnokov, Alexander - 66-11050 Daniel, Richard - 33-11376 Edge, Helen - 67-11418 Chesterman, Andrew - 39F-11194 Danielson, Gustave - 86-11631 Edge, James - 48-11031 Chianelli, Russell - 26-11633 Daniska, Vladimir - 36-11483 Edmundson, Jay - 39F-11169 Chiaravalli, Fabio - 18-11053 Darby, John - 30-11044 Edrington, Robert - 23-11476 Chichester, David - 95-11544 Das, K. - 96-11583 Edwards, Lisa - 20-11606 Chilson, Lettie - 71-11221 Daugherty, Brent - 78-11555 Edwards, Richard - 33-11325 Chirwa, Evans - 39A-11575, 39E- Davainis, Gintautas - 21-11096 Edworthy, Jamie - 86-11033 11576 Davis, Jaci - 63-11308, 78-11374 Egorov, Alexander - 80-11451 Cho, Hang-Rae - 80-11518 Dayton, Cynthia - 71-11127 Ehinger, Mike - 95-11544 Choi, In-Kil - 11-11393 Dayton, Troy - 39A-11342 Eigner, Tibor - 25A-11184 Choi, Sungyeol - 26-11673, 11672 Dayvault, Jalena - 55C-11347 Elias, Dwayne - 26-11663 Chronister, Glen - 84-11503, 11074 de Almeida, Valmor F. - 77-11116 Elmer, John - 98-11163 Chuikov, Vladimir - 86-11417 De Gregory, John - 10-11297 Elmore, Randy - 63-11308 Ciorneiu, Boris - 44-11131 Dean, Ben - 90-11322 Eluskie, J.A. - 23-11507 Clapham, Martin - 39F-11194 Deen, Stephen - 86-11652 Emery, Jeffrey - 78-11370 Clapham, Martin - 51-11249 Dekker, Simon - 70A-11363, 86-11360 Emmanuel, N.V. - 76-11336 Clarke, James - 31-11057, 65-11394 DelCul, Guillermo - 76-11336, 77- Engelhardt, Hans-Joachim - 79-11517 Clawson, Tom - 96-11038, 11362 11116 Engeman, Jason - 19-11335 Clayton, Christopher - 67-11319 DeLeon , Edgardo - 29-11537, 11526 Enokida, Youichi - 25D-11233, 49- Clemmons, James S. - 90-11472 Delgado-Cepero, Elicek - 26-11669 11274, 93-11265 Clise, Laura - 55E-11551 Delmau, Lætitia - 92-11346 Eriksson, Leif - 4-11247 Clossey, Kimberly - 86-11643 Demmer, Rick - 69-11099 Erpenbeck, Eric - 64-11449

80 WM2011 Authors Index Session in Bold followed by the Paper Number

Eschenberg, John R. - 54-11326 Garboczi, Edward - 48-11443 Grondin, Richard - 45-11445 Esh, David - 48-11443 Garcia-Martinez, Reinaldo- 55C-11361 Gross, Michael - 63-11236, 11240, Espinosa, Edgard - 86-11552 Gardiner, Mark - 55E-11314 11238, 11308 Eunice, Robert - 39D-11622 Garnier, Cedric - 54-11530 Gruber, Philippe - 44-11502, 11465 Evans, Brent - 77-11373 Garrett, Benjamin - 93-11049 Gruenewald, Wolfgang - 44-11277 Evans, Louise - 25A-11433, 39B- Gawarecki, Susan - 85-11051 Gruetzmacher, Kathleen - 51-11249 11548, 95-11544, 11432 Geeting, Mark - 33-11327, 92-11346 Gründler, Detlef - 5-11441, 39B-11556 Evans, Nick - 32-11129, 52-11097 Gelbutovsky, Alexander - 80-11451 Guduru, Rakesh - 55D-11422 Ewy, Ann - 67-11418 Gelis, Vladimir - 25C-11490 Guevara, Karen - 53-11409 Gelles, Christine - 16-11619, 65-11190 Gupta, Dinesh - 30-11109 F Gephart, Roy - 84-11074 Gupta, K. K. - 71-11113 Fahey, Christine - 86-11654 Gerdes, Kurt - 29-11526, 11513, 84- Gupta, RK - 86-11626 Fairweather, Michael - 39C-11098, 11074 52-11097, 95-11275 Gese, Conrad - 39A-11268 H Fallstrom, Stefan - 97-11479 Gesh, Chris - 95-11544 Haider, Claudia - 5-11441, 39B-11556 Fan, Jeffrey - 23-11042, 68-11559 Ghazi, Janty - 26-11665 Hall, Rachel C - 24-11032 Farin, Sebastien - 24-11527 Gibbs, Kenneth - 78-11555 Hallam, Ricky - 32-11129 Farrow, James - 91-11553 Giffin, Paxton - 58-11287 Halliwell, Steve - 82-11405, 86-11676 Fatherly, Nicki - 67-11536, 22-11073 Gilbertson, Mark - 30-11500 Halstead, Robert - 96-11256 Faulk, Darrin - 30-11044 Gillespie, Bruce - 51-11366 Hammick, Elaine - 53-11296 Fedorov, Denis - 86-11638 Gillespie, Joey - 67-11319 Hamodi, Nasir - 26-11634 Feinberg, Steven - 30-11109 Gilli, Ludivine - 24-11060 Han, Ana - 29-11526 Feist, Ella - 98-11450 Gilmartin, Gary - 43-11328 Han, Fengxiang X. - 55C-11349 Fellinger, Andrew - 29-11529, 11531 Gilmour, Jason - 64-11357 Hang, Thong - 33-11228 Fellinger, Terri - 44-11458 Gimpel, Rod - 64-11381, 93-11383 Hanigan, Nick - 43-11017 Felmy, A. - 19-11128 Ginsburg, Jeffrey - 35-11425 Hannah, Ray - 9-11052 Ferguson, Daniel - 63-11308 Girke, Natalia - 95-11043 Hansen, Erich - 44-11458 Ferroni, Paolo - 76-11390 Gladden, John - 29-11533, 11535 Hansen, Frank - 18-11299 Field, Michael - 51-11366 Glemza, Amy - 67-11536 Hansen, Randy - 67-11488 Filbert, Wolfgang - 79-11517 Gochfeld, Michael - 55E-11386 Harbottle, David - 39C-11098 Fink, James - 31-11571 Gokaltun, Seckin - 25B-11301, 11304, Hardin, Ernest - 18-11299 Fink, S. - 33-11327, 92-11346, 11215 26-11656, 86-11291 Harjula, Risto - 39A-11183 Fiuza, Antonio - 65-11607 Goldsmith, Marc - 26-11630 Harper, Michael - 70D-11199 Flach, Greg - 41-11444, 11446, 48- Goldston, Sonny - 9-11018 Hart, Christopher - 58-11586 11443, 65-11546 Goncharov, Alexander - 86-11417 Harvey, Laura - 49-11204 Fleisch, Joachim - 36-11279, 44-11277 Gondor, Pavol - 70F-11262 Hatzinger, Paul - 84-11616 Flora, Mary - 9-11052 Gonzalez, Felix - 83-11391 Hay, Michael - 25B-11220 Flyckt, Don - 45-11445 Gonzalez Galdamez, Rinaldo - 25B- Hayes, Rose - 85-11107 Flynn, Mark - 6-11459 11301 Hays, David - 67-11428, 11118, 11429, Fondeur, F. - 33-11327, 92-11215 Gopalakrishnan, Sugilal - 86-11626 11594 Foote, Martin - 84-11029, 11026 Gorbunov, Valeriy - 20-11470 Heald, Steve - 90-11447 Forbes, Pierre-Lionel - 64-11497 Gorbunova, Olga - 39E-11156 Hedahl, Tim - 24-11612 Ford, Laurie - 24-11250, 43-11251 Gordon, Sydney - 48-11120 Hedin, James - 55C-11354 Fowley, Mark - 19-11086, 64-11357 Gorton, Ian - 31-11560 Heilbron, Paulo - 49-11076 Fox, Jerry - 18-11058, 63-11059 Goswami, Dibakar - 53-11234 Henao, Alexander - 23-11042 Fox, Kevin - 86-11640 Goulart, Scott - 31-11320 Henckel, George - 34-11334 Franceschini, F. - 8-11452, 76-11390 Graf, Anja - 36-11279 Henderson, Colin - 31-11295 Franz, William - 86-11657 Graf, Reinhold - 79-11517 Henderson, Heidi - 26-11666 Freeman, Corey - 95-11544 Graham, Steve - 39F-11539 Hendrich, Klaus - 66-11278 Freeman, Jenny - 54-11326 Grave, Michael - 36-11587 Hendricks, John - 95-11432 Frei, Mark - 43-11468 Gray, Karen - 10-11235 Hendrickson, Jennifer - 78-11374 Freiwan, Sumayeh - 26-11633 Gray, Michael - 93-11049 Herman, David - 33-11325, 39A- Freshley, Mark - 31-11560, 84-11074 Grebb, Rod - 81-11608 11224, 64-11357 Fretthold, Jan - 58-11586, 11585 Greene, William - 64-11357 Hernandez, Reinier - 55D-11569 Friedrich, Daniel - 70E-11095 Greenwood, Margaret - 64-11121 Herrick, Andrew - 52-11062, 97-11061 Fujisawa, Morio - 20-11572 Greer, Daniel - 64-11193 Hertel, William - 98-11137 Fuller, Michael - 39D-11623 Greeves, John - 4-11462, 34-11463 Heywood, Nigel - 19-11195 Furner, Mike - 70D-11599 Greiner, Miles - 86-11574, 96-11573 Hickey, Cathy - 54-11326 Gresalfi, Michael - 69-11103 Hiergesell, B. - 39C-11191, 65-11404 G Gresalfi, Michelle - 22-11246 Higashiura, Norikazu - 20-11572 Gabel, Andrew - 5-11064 Grey, Mike - 5-11460 Higley, Kathryn - 32-11515 Gallaher, Benjamin - 25B-11248 Gribetz, Arthur - 25D-11093 Hilbert, Franz - 6-11110, 70B-11111 Ganaway, David - 78-11374 Griffin, Jeff - 29-11529, 11531 Hirabayashi, Daisuke - 25D-11233, Gander, Malcolm - 84-11509 Griffin, William - 36-11620 93-11265 Gandhi, Amit - 39D-11622 Griggs, Christopher - 31-11534 Hnetkovsky, Edward - 83-11391 Garber, David - 71-11160 Grochowski, T. - 20-11355, 66-11337 Hobbes, Tammy - 45-11055

81 WM2011 Authors Index Session in Bold followed by the Paper Number

Hobbs, David - 92-11215 Jha, Jyoti - 86-11626 Kim, Juyoul - 39B-11124, 55A-11492 Hodge, Devin - 78-11370 Ji, Young-Yong - 80-11281 Kim, Minkyu - 11-11393 Hofferber, Gary - 64-11449 Jines, Alan - 45-11055 Kim, Suk Hoon - 39B-11124 Hoffman, Elizabeth - 19-11128 Jo, Hyun-jun - 39F-11477 Kim, T. K. - 80-11281 Hollebecque, J. F. - 44-11465, 11502 Johns-Hughes, Kathryn - 90-11472 Kim, Taewook - 50-11427 Holm, Larry - 34-11082 Johnson, Al - 80-11271 Kimura, Hideo - 25E-11176 Holm, Melissa - 31-11295 Johnson, Caroline - 33-11189 King, Rebecca - 70F-11157 Holmes, Patrick - 22-11514 Johnson, Fabienne - 44-11561 King, William - 25B-11220 Honerlah, Hans - 67-11536 Johnson, Jared A. - 77-11116 Kinoshita, Hajime - 39A-11012 Hong, Dae-Seok - 80-11281 Johnson, Jeremy - 19-11335 Kirby, Bill - 97-11243 Hopkins, Robert - 44-11458 Johnson, Marshall - 70D-11199 Kirchner, Thomas - 36-11483 Houser, Elizabeth - 32-11515 Johnson, Mona L. - 91-11181 Kirk, Paula - 29-11533 Howard, Steve - 86-11313 Johnson, Natalie - 91-11563 Kiselev, Sergey - 30-11520, 39E- Hsueh, Kevin - 81-11617 Johnson, Thomas - 30-11109 11525 Htway, Myo Zaw - 70C-11493 Johnson, Tim - 84-11074 Klein, Tom - 63-11240 Hu, Jianwei - 95-11544 Johnston, Cliff - 86-11605 Klenke, John - 23-11489, 26-11649 Huang, Michael - 76-11390 Johnston, Frank - 98-11137 Klepikov, Alexander - 97-11061 Hubbard, Susan - 31-11560 Johnston, Janie - 45-11115 Kliczewski, Theresa - 22-11246 Hubbard, Susan - 84-11026 Johnston, Jill - 10-11143 Kluk, Anthony - 8-11478 Huczek, J. - 96-11583 Jolly, Rudy - 90-11206 Klute, Stefan - 36-11279 Huff, Kathryn - 26-11660 Jones, Scotty - 34-11334 Klymyshyn, Nicholas - 83-11392 Huff, Thomas - 33-11325, 64-11357 Jonkmans, Guy - 82-11341 Knight, Collin J - 52-11062, 97-11061 Hughes, Joan F. - 49-11166 Joseph, Innocent - 44-11458 Kobelev, Alexander - 20-11470 Hunt, Alan - 95-11544 Josephson, Gary - 94-11351 Koivula, Risto - 39A-11183 Hunt, Jeremy - 66-11498 Josephson, Walter - 31-11119, 95- Kolyadin, Vyacheslav - 66-11050 Hunter, Jeffery - 10-11297 11081 Kondratenko, Petr - 32-11134, 11147, Hunter, Timothy - 39C-11098, 95- Joussot-Dubien, Christophe - 80- 11142 11275 11072 Konopka, Allan - 55A-11345 Hurt, William - 29-11537 Jubin, Robert - 77-11116 Kopp, Michael - 91-11245 Hurley Pearson, Melanie - 30-11109 Jung, Chong Hun - 70E-11257 Koselowski, Eiko - 36-11279 Husain, Aamir - 5-11460 Jung, Hagen G. - 5-11474 Kosson, David - 29-11532, 11532, 48- Husain, Sana - 5-11460 Jung, Hoan Sung - 39D-11165 11443, 65-11546 Hussein, Oday - 39A-11012 Jung, HyoSook - 26-11673 Kot, Wing - 44-11458 Hutchison, David - 53-11186 Kothari, Vijendra - 54-11338, 67- Hutsell, Dale - 44-11458 K 11319, 98-11333 Hwang, Il-Soon - 26-11673, 11672 Kadyrov, Ilgiz - 20-11470 Kotrla, Vance - 70A-11363, 86-11360 Hwang, Meejeong - 11-11267 Kamachev, Vladislav - 70E-11293 Kouba, Steve - 63-11240, 11238 Hyatt, Jeannette - 10-11400 Kamboj, Sunita - 83-11610 Kovalchuk, Vasily - 18-11266 Kaminski, Michael - 77-11348 Kozlitin, Evgeny - 25C-11490 I Kamp, Susan - 67-11319 Krauss, Mark - 55B-11114, 97-11154 Icard, Christophe - 8-11034 Kanatzidis, Mercouri - 26-11651 Kreitman, Paul - 97-11479 Iordanov, Alexander - 18-11266 Kang, Il-Sik - 80-11281 Kretzing, Maria - 76-11356 Ivanov, Anatoliy - 97-11061 Kang, Kidoo - 39F-11477 Krieger, Kenneth - 99-11407 Iverson, Dan - 44-11136 Kapoor, Ashok - 83-11610 Kronvall, Charles - 43-11580 Iyer, Kanchana - 26-11668 Kapyrin, Ivan - 32-11269 Kudarauskas, Paul - 4-11543 Karamyan, Gagik - 70B-11045 Kugel, Karin - 5-11441, 39B-11556 J Karim, Fazlul - 39D-11624 Kuhlman, Kristopher - 63-11658 Jablonowski, Eugene - 4-11543 Kascheev, Vladimir - 25D-11491 Kuykendall, Terry - 86-11659 Jackson, Duncan - 80-11271 Kascheev, Vladimir - 25E-11065 Kvarnström, Roger - 39A-11183 Jacomino, Vanusa Maria - 49-11076 Katagiri, Gen-ichi - 20-11572 Kwicklis, Edward - 23-11161 Jäderström, Henrik - 51-11182 Katsenovich, Yelena - 23-11042, 26- Kwon, SooCheon - 86-11676 Jain, Sneh - 32-11129 11663, 55D-11422 Kwong, Simon - 39F-11539 James, Ryan - 69-11099 Kautsky, Mark - 98-11222 Janaskie, Mark - 22-11246 Keaton, Ken - 96-11038 L Jang, Ping-Rey - 90-11139 Keefer, Mark - 64-11357 Labe, Virginie - 44-11465 Jantzen, Carol - 77-11593 Kehler, Kurt - 52-11434 Lachaume, Jean Luc - 18-11056, 98- Jaraysi, Moses - 53-11595 Kehrman, Robert - 63-11236 11070 Jarvis, Richard - 36-11587 Keister, Marsha - 96-11038 Lacombe, J. - 44-11465 Jenkins, Alex - 97-11521 Ketusky, Edward - 90-11413 Ladirat, Christian - 44-11465 Jenks, Jeromy - 64-11121 Khalafyan, Hajk - 70B-11045 LaFleur, Adrienne - 95-11544 Jensen, Jesse - 19-11242 Kidman, Lynn - 55B-11155, 68-11557 Lagdon, Chip - 86-11631 Jeong, Jongtae - 11-11393, 11267 Kilpatrick, Esq., Laura E. - 98-11133 Lagos, Leonel - 10-11297, 22-11389, Jeong, Seungyoung - 55A-11492 Kim, Chang Ki - 70E-11257 11300, 23-11042, 26-11670, 11666, Jernigan, Thomas - 30-11109 Kim, Dong-Sang - 44-11561 11665, 55D-11422, 11569, 68-11559, Jewett, Cybele - 82-11341 Kim, Hyo - 70C-11493 70F-11298, 86-11552, 97-11567, 99- Jewett, Marc - 53-11595 Kim, Hyung-Kyoo - 39D-11165 11303, 100-11332

82 WM2011 Authors Index Session in Bold followed by the Paper Number

Lahoda, Edward - 8-11452, 76-11390, Lind, Randall - 97-11567 Marzolf, Dale - 95-11149 11356 Lindberg, Michael - 90-11447 Mason, C. - 55E-11368 Lane, Thomas - 10-11143 Lindner, Jeff - 25C-11046, 29-11532, Mason, J. Brad - 77-11373 Langton, Christine - 22-11197, 36- 86-11369 Matheny, David - 36-11620 11620, 48-11443, 65-11546 Linge, Igor - 18-11266, 32-11269, Mathers, Daniel - 52-11588 Laraia, Michele - 36-11483 11134 Matlack, Keith - 44-11131 Larkin, Jeff - 19-11364 Listjak, Martin - 70F-11262 Matos, Jose - 26-11662 Larson, Steven - 31-11534 Littleton, Brian - 70A-11208 Mattar Neto, Miguel - 6-11037 Larsson, Viktor - 26-11385 Liu, Chen-Wuing - 39B-11253 Matthews, Patrick - 3-11153, 55B- Lattin, William - 45-11055 Liu, Guangliang - 68-11559 11155, 97-11154 Laura Kay, Harvey - 49-11166 Liu, Xuegang - 33-11440 Mattigod, Shas - 25D-11167, 84- Laurent, Gerard - 52-11174 Liu, Yung - 55F-11230 11026, 11029 Lawless, Bill - 18-11558 Lively, Jeffrey - 34-11614, 68-11244 Matveev, Leonid - 32-11147, 11134 Le, Minh Hong - 39B-11126 Lloyd, Peter - 97-11567 Mayev, Viktor - 52-11062 Le, Sieu - 39B-11255 Lober, Robert - 31-11295 McCabe, Daniel - 29-11535 Le Bars, Igor - 24-11060 Lockrem, Lisa - 55C-11354 McCauley, Dave - 24-11321 Le Clere, Stephen - 66-11286 Loeb, Andreas - 36-11100 McCown, Jay - 70C-11350 Leary, Kevin - 84-11509 Lombardo, A. - 67-11536, 68-11244 McCullough, Stuart - 70D-11199 Leber, Ferenc - 25A-11184 Long, J.T. - 36-11620 McDaniel, Dwayne - 25B-11304, Lebrun, Didier - 8-11034 Long, Zhiling - 90-11139 11289, 55D-11422, 86-11291 Ledoux, Alain - 44-11465 Looney, Brian - 29-11535 McElhaney, S.A. - 82-11270 Lee, Chang-Ju - 24-11171 Loop, Margaret - 71-11160, 11140 McGrogan, James - 83-11589 Lopez, Alejandro - 68-11244 McIlwain, Heidi - 86-11033 Lee, Cheo Kyung - 39D-11165, 70C- Lorenz, Connie - 99-11469 McKenney, Dale - 53-11456 11493 Lowry, Nancy - 9-11198 McKibbin, John G. - 71-11113 Lee, Denise L. - 92-11346 Lu, Dan - 32-11416 McLaughlin, Jacqueline - 55F-11628 Lee, Hok - 55F-11230 Lucero, Randy - 51-11249 McLeod, Rick - 85-11066 Lee, Jongkuk - 25C-11094 Ludewigt, Bernhard - 95-11544 McNeil, Jim - 22-11073 Lee, Kun Jai - 25C-11094 Ludowise, John - 31-11119 McSwain, J. - 43-11562, 91-11563 Lee, Kune-Woo - 70E-11257 Lukemeyer, Anna - 9-11380 Meehan, Adam - 80-11271 Lee, Nara - 50-11427 Lund, John - 96-11362 Meess, Daniel - 71-11113 Lee, Seung Yeop - 55A-11578 Luong, Pham - 70F-11494 Meeussen, JCL - 48-11443, 65-11546 Lee, Si - 19-11086 Lusk, Gary - 45-11055 Mehta, Sunil - 55B-11565 Lee, Sun Kee - 6-11258 Lutz, Melissa - 54-11338 Mellor, Russell - 7-11132 Lee, Sunjoung - 39B-11124 Lutz, Werner - 66-11278, 70E-11095 Menaa, Nabil - 51-11398 Lee, Taehoon - 95-11544, 11419 Lyons, John - 76-11390 Mendez, William - 97-11567 Lee, William - 52-11097 Menlove, Howard O. - 25A-11433, 95- Lee, Yoon Hee - 25C-11094 M 11419, 11544 Lee, Youngju - 39F-11477 MacFarlan, Gary - 22-11566 Meredith, David - 34-11499 Leishear, Robert - 19-11086 Mackin, PMP, John - 78-11370 Mertz, Joshua - 26-11651 Lemieux, Paul - 4-11543 Mackintosh, Angela - 7-11284 Metlyaev, E. - 30-11520, 39E-11525 Leonard, Kathleen - 45-11650 Maeng, Sung Jun - 50-11427 Mets, Mindy - 54-11101 Leonard, Ralph - 92-11346 Maestas, Gerry - 55E-11368 Meza, Juan - 31-11560 LePoire, David - 69-11540 Maggio, Samuel - 22-11300 Miano, Sandra Cecília - 39F-11150 Leprevost, Fabrice - 44-11482 Mahadevan, Sankaran - 65-11546 Michael, James - 4-11543 Lerch, Jeff - 53-11592 Mahood, Richard - 23-11476 Michalczak, Linda - 71-11138 Lesec, Valerie - 64-11497 Maiden, Linda - 45-11445 Michelbacher, John - 52-11062 Leshikar, Greg - 64-11449 Malek-Mohammadi, Siamak - 55C- Mihara, Shigeru - 21-11164 Letourneau, Martin - 22-11073, 65- 11361 Mikula, Jozsef - 25A-11184 11394 Mallick, Pramod - 29-11532, 48-11443 Miller, Charles - 84-11509 Levitt, Marc - 31-11571, 84-11509 Maloney, Moira - 22-11073 Miller, Dustin - 50-11216 Li, Chen-Zhong - 55D-11422 Man, Alex - 86-11033 Miller, Keith - 39F-11539 Li, Ming-Hsu - 39B-11253 Manos, Emmanouil - 26-11651 Miller, Timothy - 39D-11004 Li, Shaowei - 33-11440 Marble, Justin - 29-11513, 84-11074 Mills, Andrew - 67-11428 Li, Yanbin - 68-11559 Marquis, Philip - 26-11385 Milyutin, Vitaly - 25C-11490 Liang, Liyuan - 29-11513 Marra, James - 25D-11397, 29-11526, Mimura, H. - 25E-11192, 32-11378 Lieberman, Jim - 4-11462, 34-11463 44-11561, 86-11640 Mintz, T. - 83-11582, 96-11583 Lien, Peter - 83-11016 Marra, Sharon - 29-11532 Miracle, Ann - 84-11026, 86-11454 Lifanov, Fyodor - 20-11470 Marschke, Stephen - 70A-11208 Miranda, Carlos Alexandre - 6-11037 Lightfoot, Jeremey - 80-11271 Martin, Joni - 55E-11551 Mishra, Phoolendra - 84-11415 Lim, In-Cheol - 39D-11165 Martin, Ken - 23-11508 Mitchell, Carina - 94-11210 Lim, Suk Nam - 6-11258, 86-11676 Martin, Rich - 94-11367 Mityanin, Aleksey - 25D-11491 Lima, Nadia - 22-11389 Martino, Jason - 86-11033 Moak, Don - 45-11445 Lima Neto, Bertino do Carmo - 39F- Martoyan, Gagik - 70B-11045 Moggia, Fabrice - 70E-11225 11150 Marumo, Júlio Takehiro - 39A-11130, Mohr, Robert - 44-11458 Lin, Wen-Sheng - 39B-11253 82-11144 Monetti, Alessandra - 26-11661

83 WM2011 Authors Index Session in Bold followed by the Paper Number

Montoya, Andrew - 45-11329 Nojiri, Kouji - 21-11164 Philip, Jacob - 48-11443 Monts, David - 55C-11349, 90-11139 Norton, O. Perry - 90-11139 Philips, Sasha - 51-11366 Moon, Jei-Kwon - 70E-11257 Novara, Oscar - 6-11037 6-11037 Phillips, Chris - 94-11210 Moon, John Unyong - 30-11500 Numata, Mamoru - 21-11164 Phillips, Jan - 100-11581 Moore, James - 67-11594 Nutt, William - 76-11008 Phillips, Monica - 78-11555 Morgen, Gerry - 64-11121 Phillips, Tammy - 91-11181 Moricca, Sam - 86-11652 O Picazo, Esteban - 78-11374 Morimoto, Yasutomi - 21-11164 O'Leary, Philip - 100-11382 Pickenheim, Brad - 44-11458 Morris, Linda - 99-11407 O'Neill, Michael - 67-11536 Pierce, Eric - 29-11513 Morris, Patrick - 43-11562 O'Sullivan, Patrick - 36-11483 Pierce, Robert - 25C-11178, 92-11179 Morrison, Stan - 55C-11347, 98-11222 Ohland, Grant - 31-11320 Pike, Jeff - 4-11543 Morse, John - 23-11508, 84-11074 Ojovan, Michael - 25E-11065, 39A- Pin, François - 97-11567 11484, 11012 Pinet, Olivier - 44-11502 Morton, R. Lee - 43-11562, 91-11563 Okazaki, Junya - 21-11164 Plymale, Andrew A. - 55A-11345 Most, William - 63-11236 Okhuysen, Walter P. - 90-11139 Podymova, Tatiana - 25D-11491 Motiejunas, Stasys - 21-11096, 11164 Ooura, Hirotaka - 21-11164 Poe, Tim - 86-11205 Mottershead, Gary - 82-11405 Ordogh, Miklos - 25A-11184 Poirier, Michael - 19-11086, 33-11327, Moulton, David - 31-11560 Orrell, Andrew - 18-11299 33-11189, 39A-11224, 64-11357, 86- Mourao, Rogerio - 6-11037 6-11037 Ortega, Luis - 77-11348 11226 Mowry, R. - 51-11366 Ouzounian, Gérald - 79-11020, 11013, Pokhitonov, Yury - 70E-11293 Moyer, Bruce - 92-11346 80-11554 Polkanov, Mikhail - 20-11470 Mozin, Vladimir - 95-11544 Polo, Edgar - 22-11389 Mueller, Wilhelm - 51-11398 P Poluektov, Pavel - 25D-11491, 25E- Mukusheva, Maira - 68-11088 Paajanen, Airi - 39A-11183 11065 Muzrukova, Valentina - 66-11050 Palmeter, Tim - 86-11654 Polyakov, Yuri - 18-11266 Myers, Jonathan - 84-11616 Palmu, Marjatta - 79-11020 Poncet, Bernard - 36-11135 Mylavarapu, Sai Kiran - 26-11385 Pancake, Daniel - 45-11316 Pope, Robert - 24-11032 Pant, P. - 26-11670, 55D-11569 Potter, Darren - 36-11587, 52-11588 N Park, Jaeyeong - 26-11672 Powell, Jane - 54-11338, 98-11137, Nagy, Barnabas - 25A-11184 Park, Jea Ho - 6-11258 11333 Naik, Punith - 25C-11046 Park, Jin Beak - 39B-11124 Powers, Charles - 55E-11386 Nair, K.N.S - 86-11626 Park, Jongkil - 80-11518 Prevette, Steven - 55F-11430, 11431 Nakagawa, Akinori - 80-11079 Park, Kyoung-Rok - 80-11518 Pribanic, Tomas - 86-11291 Nakazawa, Dante - 51-11366 Parker, Danny - 31-11295 Priest, Susanna - 9-11380 Nakazawa, Osamu - 80-11079 Parkinson, Ken - 19-11086 Primack, Michelle - 34-11499 Naline, Sandrine - 44-11502, 11482, Parrish, Cayce - 4-11543 Primrose, Annette - 34-11151, 70F- 11465 Parsons, Michael - 58-11287 11157 Nardi, A. Joseph - 50-11216, 52-11003 Pasieka, Holly - 44-11458 Prudhon, Eric - 44-11482 Nash, Charles - 33-11189, 11228 Passig, Steve - 67-11488 Pujol, Florian - 80-11072 Natesan, Ken - 77-11348 Patchet, Stanley - 63-11308 Pustobayev, Sergey - 97-11061 Necsoiu, Marius - 83-11582 Patel, Romani - 25B-11289 Neeson, Paul - 5-11064 Patil, SB - 86-11626 Q Negin, Charles - 22-11246 Patterson, Russell - 63-11240, 11238 Qafoku, Nikolla - 94-11351 Neill, Helen - 9-11380 Patton, Bradley - 77-11116 Qafoku, Odeta - 19-11128 Neill, Robert H. - 85-11609 Payne, Christina - 77-11373 Quintana, Fernando - 6-11037 Nekrassova, Natalya - 25C-11490 Peakall, Jeff - 39C-11098, 95-11275 Quintero, W. - 10-11297, 99-11303 Nelson, Jerel - 43-11562, 91-11563 Pearson, Larry - 25C-11046 Qureshi, Zafar - 39A-11224 Nelson, Roger - 55C-11354, 63-11039, Pearson, Sam - 94-11367 11040 Peeler, David - 44-11561, 11458, 93- R Neuman, S. - 32-11416, 84-11415 11461 Raaz, Richard - 24-11612 Newell, Kimberly - 85-11148 Pegg, Ian - 44-11458, 11131 Radomski, Art - 51-11366 Newton, Dean - 35-11330, 99-11309 Pehkonen, Miia - 39A-11183 Rahman, MD - 67-11488, 11418, 86- Ng, Sheidyn - 26-11667 Pelizza, Mark - 23-11613 11313 Ngachin, M. - 26-11656, 70F-11298 Pendleton, Justin - 39A-11342 Ramirez, Carlos - 43-11562 Ngo, Phan - 55A-11315 Pennebaker, Frank - 25B-11220 Ramirez, Rosa - 29-11513, 84-11074 Nguyen, Chien - 39B-11126 Pernot, Laurence - 100-11581 Ramsey, Gene - 93-11049 Nguyen, Dien - 49-11166 Peters, Richard - 43-11471 Ranc, Guillaume - 80-11072 Nguyen, Long - 55A-11315, 11123 Peters, Thomas P. - 33-11327, 92- Rasmussen, Tom - 81-11077 Nguyen, Tien - 49-11204 11346 Rastorguev, Aleksandr - 32-11269 Nicholson, Thomas - 80-11323 Petersen, Gary - 55C-11371 Regalbuto, Monica - 29-11526 Niemeyer, Craig - 81-11077 Petersen, Scott - 23-11476 Rehmann, M. - 23-11613, 81-11608 Nigam, Hitesh - 8-11478 Peterson, Dave M. - 98-11222 Replogle, Chadwick - 70D-11199 Niibori, Yuichi - 25E-11192, 32-11378 Peterson, J. - 26-11385, 55E-11384 Restivo, Mike - 39A-11224 Nikonov, Boris - 25D-11475 Peterson, R.- 33-11377, 11376, 11379 Reynolds, Jacob - 86-11605 Nizhnik, Vladimir - 51-11398 Petrovic, Bojan - 8-11452, 76-11390 Rice, William - 30-11545 Noakes, Mark - 97-11567 Phelps, Ralph - 55E-11368 Richard, Frederic - 70E-11225

84 WM2011 Authors Index Session in Bold followed by the Paper Number

Rickert, Jaime - 58-11287 Schelkanova , Elena - 30-11520 Smith, Thomas - 30-11280 Riddick, Andy - 035-11466 Schepens, Roy - 33-11377 Smoot, John - 23-11507 Riley, John - 96-11362 Scherrer, Susan T. - 86-11231 Sneve, Malgorzata K. - 30-11520 Rios, Frank - 22-11514 Schiesswohl, Steve - 98-11133 Sodaro, Michael - 45-11316 Rios-Armstrong, Maria - 33-11325 Schmidt, Rebecca - 24-11080 Soetens, Timothy - 50-11025 Ripholz, Martina - 70E-11095 Schmitz, Franz-Josef - 44-11277 Solomon, Lloyd - 39D-11622 Risoluti, Piero - 18-11053 Schneider, K. - 26-11653, 70D-11199 Sondrup, Jeffrey - 65-11455 Rittenberg, Robert - 35-11512 Schneider, Steven - 29-11531, 11526 Sone, Tomoyuki - 80-11079 Rivera, Jose - 22-11389 Schonewill, P. - 33-11376, 64-11121 Sorokaletova, Alexandra - 25D-11475 Robbins, Rebecca - 48-11031 Schultheisz, Daniel - 4-11543 Sorokina, Anna - 25D-11475 Robertson, Jim - 7-11211 Schweiger, Michael - 44-11561 Spiliotopoulos, Alex - 23-11507 Robinson, Sharon - 43-11328 Scupin, Cornelia - 5-11474 Spillane, Tim - 51-11398 Robocker, Jessica - 19-11335 Seamans, James - 51-11249 Spiridonov, Sergey - 68-11088 Rodrigues, Debora Frigi - 39A-11130 Segerud , Per - 97-11479 Spreng, Carl - 53-11234 Rodriguez, Mary - 45-11232 Seitz, Roger - 29-11513, 65-11190 Srivastava, Piyush - 86-11626 Roelant, David - 25B-11289, 29- Semenov, K. - 20-11470, 86-11417 Stamper, John - 68-11504, 11505 11532, 55C-11361, 68-11559, 86- Semenov, Sergey - 66-11050 Stanke, Dieter - 36-11100 11291, 99-11303 Serafin Jr., James - 43-11212 Staub, Aaron - 95-11149 Roesener, W. Scott - 77-11373 Seregin, Vladimir - 30-11520 Stauffer, Philip - 30-11545 Rogers, Donna - 68-11310, 70C- Sergey, Baranov - 68-11088 Steeper, Tim - 19-11086, 39A-11224 11350, 97-11358 Serne, Jeffrey - 94-11351 Stefanko, David - 36-11620 Rojas, Mario Roberto - 26-11655 Serrato, Mike - 22-11197 Stefanovsky, S. - 25D-11397, 11475 Romanenko, Oleg - 52-11062 Shafer, David - 10-11235 Steinmetz, Hans-Jürgen - 95-11043 Romano, Cathy - 95-11544 Shandala, N. - 30-11520, 39E-11525 Stepanik, Terence - 86-11033 Romanovsky, Valery - 86-11640 Shannon, Robert - 10-11143 Sterbentz, James - 95-11544 Romanowski, Larry - 90-11177 Sheldon, Frederick - 41-11340 Stevens, Lee - 35-11466 Rood, Arthur - 65-11455 Shelton, Catherine - 35-11170 Stewart, Martin - 86-11652 Rood, Marc - 19-11353 Shepard, Mark - 90-11472 Stewart, William - 34-11424 Ross, Sherri - 85-11406 Shephard, Eugene - 53-11296 Steyer, Stefan - 5-11441, 39B-11556 Roth, Guenther - 44-11277 Shimada, Takahiro - 93-11265 Stillo, Andrew - 58-11604 Rovneiko, Andrey - 52-11062 Shimojo, Mikio - 21-11164 Stine, Ernest - 84-11616 Rowe, John - 97-11567 Shimskey, Rick - 33-11377, 11376 Stone, Michael - 44-11458 Rowell, Laurene - 71-11140 Shirai, Keisuke - 25E-11192 Stormo, Julie - 58-11586 Rucker, Dale - 31-11571, 84-11509 Shoffner, Peggy - 10-11297, 22- Stubblefield, Rita - 9-11052 Ruiz, Jean-Christophe - 80-11072 11300, 26-11666, 99-11303 Su, Yi - 55C-11349 Ruskauff, Greg - 23-11161 Shore, Lawrence - 25D-11093 Subramanian, Karthik - 90-11413 Russ, William R. - 51-11398 Shrestha, Kamal K - 26-11645 Suffield, Sarah - 83-11392 Russell, Renee - 33-11379 Shrestha, Shanta Lall - 26-11645 Sugaya, Atsushi - 39A-11078 Rustick, Joseph - 65-11394 Shuler, James - 55F-11230 Sukop, Michael - 26-11656 Ryu, Woo-Seog - 80-11281 Shumilova, Yulia - 25C-11490 Suo Anttila, A. - 86-11574, 96-11573 Sibley, Peter - 80-11271 Suryanarayan, Sriram - 5-11460 S Silva, Luis - 6-11037 Suttora, Linda - 48-11443, 85-11406 Sahay, Peeyush - 86-11231 Silvas, Alissa - 70F-11157 Suzuki, Yasuhiro - 21-11164 Sakata, Solange Kazumi - 39A-11130 Simmons, Sally - 23-11508 Swanberg, David - 48-11031 Saldivar, Jr., Eloy - 10-11400 Simpkin, Tom - 23-11507 Sweeney, Katie - 23-11613 Saliba, Roberto - 6-11037 6-11037 Simpson, Alan - 39F-11194, 82-11270 Swinhoe, M.T. - 25A-11433, 95- Samadi, Azadeh - 77-11373 Sims, Anthony - 55F-11628 11432, 11419, 11544 Sams, Terry - 48-11031 Sinclair, Karen - 54-11439 Szilagyi, Andrew - 22-11246, 29- Samson, Eric - 48-11443 Singh, D. - 36-11620 11533, 11526 Sanchette, Dominique - 66-11337 Singledecker, Steven - 34-11334 Sanchez, Melissa - 26-11670 Skorska , Marysia - 31-11571 T Sano, Kazuya - 20-11572 Skubal, Karen - 29-11513 Tachiev, Georgio - 25B-11289, 26- Sarkar, Sohini - 41-11446, 65-11546 Slaathaug, Eric - 64-11381 11668, 11663, 55C-11361 Sartelet, Stephane - 64-11497 Slavik, Ondrej - 70F-11262 Taddei, Maria Helena - 49-11076, 82- Sasaki, Tadashi - 21-11164 Slomba, Kevin - 71-11160 11144 Sasaki, Toshiki - 80-11079 Sloop, Frederick - 92-11346 Tagami, Keiko - 55A-11254, 11252 Satou, Yutaka - 21-11164 Slovak, Mark - 22-11514 Takeda, Seiji - 25E-11176 Savkin, Alexander - 21-11272 Smith, Collin - 33-11377 Tamura, Naoyuki - 32-11378 Sawada, Kayo - 25D-11233, 49- Smith, Eric - 44-11131 Tanada, Yusuke - 25D-11233 11274, 93-11265 Smith, Frank - 41-11446, 11444 Tanaka, Katie - 48-11120 Schaab, Bill - 70D-11599 Smith, Gary - 44-11561 Tanaka, Kenji - 39A-11078 Schacherer, Laurent - 80-11554 Smith, L. Eric - 95-11544 Taniguchi, Kazufumi - 21-11164 Schaeffer, David - 39F-11169 Smith, Laura - 25C-11046, 86-11369 Tashiro, Kiyoshi - 80-11079 Schassburger, Richard - 30-11500 Smith, Michael - 44-11136 Tatrik, Ivo - 66-11473 Schear, M.A. - 25A-11433, 39B-11548, Smith, Nick - 26-11453 Taylor, Geoff - 65-11075 95-11432, 11544 Smith, Ray - 54-11158 Taylor, Glenn - 65-11404, 11075

85 WM2011 Authors Index Session in Bold followed by the Paper Number

Taylor, Paul - 23-11042, 94-11210 Van Chinh, Nguyen - 70F-11494 Wiblin, Claude - 67-11418 Taylor, Peter - 86-11033 Van Der Sloot, H. - 48-11443, 65- Widdop, Michael - 67-11319 Taylor-Pashow, Kathryn - 92-11215 11546 Wiersma, Bruce - 19-11128, 22- Tazhibaeva, I.L. - 52-11062 Vanatta, Matthew - 19-11242 11197, 25B-11220, 90-11413 Tedeschi, Rick - 19-11364 Vance, Eric - 86-11652 Wilborn, Bill - 23-11161 Tenforde, Thomas - 69-11035 Vandergraaf, Tjalle - 30-11481 Willey, David - 25A-11145 Teramoto, Shizuo - 21-11164 VanMiddlesworth, Paul - 23-11476 Williams, Neil - 92-11346 Terekhov, D.S. - 76-11336 Varet, Thierry - 70E-11225 Williamson, Jack - 52-11294 Terremoto, Luis Antonio - 82-11144 Vargas, Jose - 22-11514 Wilson, Paul - 26-11660 Thaxton, George - 86-11226 Vargas, Mario - 97-11567 Wilson, Robert - 19-11364 Thiele, Tom - 70F-11157 Varona, Jose - 26-11665, 86-11291 Wilson, Ryan - 86-11643 Thien, Mike - 64-11193 Vassilevski, Yuri - 32-11269 Wilson IV, Charles Algeo - 26-11674 Thien, Mike - 64-11241 Vedder, Ramond - 77-11116 Winkler, Lora - 71-11221 Tholen, Marion - 79-11517 Veilleux, John - 51-11249 Winkler, Sylvia - 36-11279 Thompson, Martin - 82-11341 Venetz, Theodore - 19-11335 Winters, Wade - 70B-11200 Thompson, Mike - 99-11309 Venkataraman, Ram - 51-11398 Wittenauer, Stephan - 36-11279 Thompson, Randy - 98-11333 Vicente, Roberto - 82-11144 Won, Hui-Jun - 70E-11257 Tilton, Fred - 84-11026, 86-11454 Vicente de Pádua Ferreira, Rafael - Woocay, Arturo - 23-11489, 26-11649 Timm, C. - 18-11058, 63-11059 39A-11130 Wood, Stephen- 25B-11301, 26-11671 Tinsley, Tim - 43-11017 Vienna, John - 8-11564, 29-11526, Wooley, Theodore - 64-11121 Tisler, Andrew - 64-11239 44-11561 Workman, David - 30-11280 Titov, Alexey - 30-11520, 39E-11525 Vieru, Gheorghe - 34-11273 Worrall, Andrew - 25A-11433 Tobie, Winfried - 44-11277 Vieth, Carl - 100-11382 Worthy, Roneisha - 31-11057 Tobin, Stephen J. - 25A-11433, 39B- Vitali, Jason - 19-11207 Wrapp, John - 34-11082, 11151, 48- 11548, 95-11419, 11432, 11544 Voit, Stewart L. - 77-11116 11120 Todd, Terry - 8-11564 Volkov, Viktor - 66-11050, 86-11417 Wright, Amber - 26-11577 Toghiani, R. - 25C-11046, 86-11369 Vora, Vishal - 77-11373 Wright, Steve - 19-11242 Tonazzi, Juan Carlos - 55D-11467 Wu, Yuxin - 84-11026 Tonkin, Matthew - 23-11507 W Torres, Patrice - 80-11554 Wada, Hiroshi - 21-11164 X Tortoso, Arlene - 23-11508 Waggoner, Charles - 31-11534, 58- Xia, Yunju - 86-11369 Toulemonde, Valerie - 70E-11225 11287, 68-11310, 70C-11350, 97- Xu, Jingming - 33-11440 Townson, Paul - 19-11242, 64-11241, 11358 Xue, Liang - 32-11416 11193 Wagner, Rick - 48-11120 Tran, Phuong - 49-11166 Walker, Stuart - 53-11570, 69-11568 Y Trellue, Holly - 95-11544 Walkingshaw, Martin - 24-11612 Yadav, Nitin - 25B-11289 Trinh, Giap - 55A-11315 Walkley, Jeff - 45-11650 Triplett, Mark - 84-11074 Walnicki, Scott - 67-11428, 11429 Yakovlev, Igor - 52-11062, 97-11061 Trivett, Robert - 100-11311 Walpole, Bradley - 19-11353 Yakovleva, Elena - 86-11635 Tronche, Eric - 44-11465 Walsh, Theresa - 70D-11199 Yamamoto, Tatsumi - 21-11164 Troshev, Alexander - 80-11451 Walter, Nelson - 53-11296 Yamazaki, Katsuo - 21-11164 Truex, Michael - 84-11074 Walther, Jim - 54-11048, 55E-11047 Yang, Haori - 51-11366 Trung, Huynh Van - 39B-11126 Walton, John - 23-11489, 26-11649 Yang, Jiann - 83-11391 Truong, Bao H. - 26-11385 Walton, Zane - 30-11044 Yao, Jun - 39C-11098 Tsai, Hanchung - 55F-11230 Wang, Chuji - 86-11231 Ye, Ming - 32-11416 Tucker, Brian - 67-11118 Wang, Jianchen - 33-11440 Yim, S.P. - 39D-11165, 70C-11493 Turc, Hubert Alexandre - 80-11072 Warburton, Jamie - 26-11453 Yoo, Sun Kyun - 39D-11165 Tusa, Esko - 21-11002, 39A-11183 Warner, Scott - 23-11621 Yoshikawa, Hiroaki - 25E-11192 Washenfelder, Dennis - 19-11335 Younan, Nicolas - 68-11310 U Watanabe, Masatoshi - 25E-11176 Young, James - 39C-11098, 52-11097 Uchida, Shigeo - 55A-11254, 11252 Waters, Michael - 83-11016 Yucel, Vefa - 34-11151 Udovitsch, Matt - 35-11196 Waters, Mike - 45-11445, 83-11589 Uhlmeyer, Terri - 98-11333 Waugh, Jody - 55C-11347 Z Um, Wooyong - 94-11351 Waymer, Justin - 36-11620 Zadins, Zintars - 22-11073 Umek, Anthony - 55F-11431, 11430 Webber, Frank - 53-11186 Zelmer, Robert - 24-11321 Unz, Ronald - 97-11358 Wei, Wei - 68-11310 Zeng, Zuotao - 77-11348 Upadhyay, H. - 10-11297, 99-11303 Wellman, Dawn - 29-11513, 84- Zhang, Shaowei - 39A-11484 Urland, Charles - 22-11246 11074, 11026, 11029, 86-11454 Zhong, Lirong - 84-11026 Utkin, Sergey - 32-11269 Wells, David - 52-11062, 97-11061 Ziemianski, Edward - 45-11055 Utley, Elizabeth - 94-11223 Wenner, Michael - 76-11390 Zope, Mandar - 26-11668 Wentz, Terry - 99-11309 V West, Lori - 45-11445 Vaidotas, Algirdas - 21-11096 Westsik, Joseph - 25D-11167 Välimaa, Ilkka - 39A-11183 Westsik, Joseph - 94-11351 Subject to change, please see signage van Blerk, Japie - 65-11190 Wethington, Ken - 35-11196 and the Errata sheet onsite for current Van Boxem, Philippe - 66-11337 Whitworth, Julia - 34-11424 updates at the conference.

86 EXHIBITION AND MARKETPLACE

WM Symposia provides the world's largest exhibition for the management of radioactive waste material, featuring four days of access to the key companies your organization needs for success!

Located on the lower level of the Phoenix Convention Center’s West Building, the comprehensive technical exhibit showcases all aspects of products and services related to the nuclear waste industry. Areas of interest include protective clothing, remote/robotic handling, hazardous waste storage, transportation, diagnostic instrumentation, engineering design and construction, environmental laboratories, decontamination and decommissioning, and environmental remediation.

Attendees to the conference are typically decision makers of large worldwide corporations and government procurement agencies. For more information on exhibiting at WM2012, please contact WM Symposia at [email protected] or by phone at 480-557-0263.

Exhibit Hours Sunday, February 27, 2011 5:00 PM – 8:00 PM (Opening Welcome Reception) Monday, February 28, 2011 8:30 AM – 6:00 PM (International Reception 5 pm – 6 pm) Tuesday, March 1, 2011 9:00 AM – 6:00 PM (Best of Arizona Reception 5 pm – 6 pm) Wednesday, March 2, 2011 9:00 AM – 1:30 PM (Luncheon/booth prize drawings 12:00 pm – 1:30 pm)

Exhibitor List with Booth Number as of January 18, 2011

ABW Technologies, Inc. 323 Central Research Laboratories 102 AECOM 138 Ceradyne, Inc. 421 Aerotek 136 CETCO 824 Alaron Nuclear Services 1026 CH2M HILL 933 Alliant Corporation 829 Clauss Construction 227 ALS Environmental 426 Columbia Energy & Environmental Svcs, Inc. 735 AMEC 438 Columbiana Hi Tech 428 American Crane & Equipment Corporation 503 Commodore Advanced Sciences, Inc. 411 American DND, Inc. 127 Container Products Corporation 635 American Radiation Services, Inc. (ARS Container Technologies Industries, LLC 521 International) 615 CSS-Dynamac 335 Applied Research Center 510 Cutting Edge Services Corporation 418

AREVA 301 SILVER SPONSOR Dade Moeller & Associates 810 Dekker, Ltd. 144 Arup 437 DEMCO, Inc. 117 Ascendent, LLC 603 DeNuke Contracting Services, Inc. 417 ATI Nuclear Energy 619 Diversified Metal Products, Inc 415 Attention IT, Inc. 517 DW James Consulting, LLC 608 Austin Master Services LLC 158 E2 Consulting Engineers, Inc. 436 B & B Environmental Safety, Inc. 125 Eastern Technologies, Inc. 727 Babcock Services, Inc 320 Eberline Services, Inc. 405 Barnhart Nuclear Services 319 ECC 605 Bartlett Services, Inc. 108 Eichrom Technologies LLC, Nuclear Power Outfitters Berkeley Nucleonics Corporation 322 LLC 830 Brandenburg Industrial Service Company 124 ENERCON 520 Brokk 200 EnergySolutions 701 Burns and Roe 610 Environmental Dimensions, inc. (EDi) 430 Environmental Rail Solutions, Inc. 1027 Cabrera Services, Inc. 717 Cartwright Engineers 109 Federal Engineers and Constructors (FE&C) 115 Cast Transportation 519 Cavanagh Services Group, Inc. 713 Fluor 919 GOLD SPONSOR CDM 409

87 Frham Safety Products, Inc. 731 Off-Site Recovery Project at LANL 536 Fuji Electric Systems Co., Ltd. 128 ORTEC 617

GE Hitachi Nuclear Energy 162 Pace Analytical Services, Inc. 832 GEL Laboratories, LLC 704 PacTec, Inc. 720 General Plastics Manufacturing Company 532 Pajarito Scientific Corporation 538 GEOVARIANCES 434 Getinge La Calhene 509 PaR Systems, Inc. 732 GOLD SPONSOR Golder Associates Inc. 714 GoldSim Technology Group 729 Paragon D&E 132 Greenfield Logistics 123 Parsons 514 Pentek, Inc. 401 Hanyang University Holdings Co., Ltd. 337 Perkins Specialized Trans. Contracting 539 Hot Cell Services 600 Perma-Fix Environmental Services, Inc. 309 Petersen, Inc. 215 IBC Advanced Technologies, Inc. 331 PIERCAN, Inc 602 I.C.E. Service Group, Inc. 1019 Plant Decommissioning 706 ICx Radiation 718 Porvair Filtration Group Ltd. - Microfiltrex Div. 534 IMPACT Services, Inc. 114 Premier Technology, Inc. 325 Industrial Tomography Systems PLC 736 Project Services Group, LLC (PSG) 504 InTomes Technical Services Inc. 511 Inventure Laboratories, Inc. 107 Quality Inspection Services, Inc. 501 ISO PACIFIC Nuclear Assay Systems, Inc. 221 R.W. Wiesener, Inc. 507 Joseph Oat Corporation 931 Radwaste Solutions 927 Reef Industries, Inc. 422 KoneCranes Nuclear Equipment & Services 609 Remotec/Northrup Grumman 738 RJR Engineering, P.C. 511 Longenecker & Associates, Inc. 708 RMD Instruments Corp. 165 Robatel Technologies LLC 611 MACTEC 315 Rolls-Royce 122 Major Tool and Machine, Inc. 725 Mandall BarrierWorks/ArmorWorks 146 S.A. Technology 502 Marshallton Research Laboratories, Inc. 924 S.M. Stoller Corporation, The 515 Mega-Tech Services, LLC 1013 SA Mays, LLC 1025 Metal Solutions Design & Fabrication, LLC 1033 Safety & Ecology Corporation (SEC) 205 MHF Services 900 BRONZE SPONSOR BRONZE SPONSOR

Mid Columbia Engineering Inc. 623 Savannah River Nuclear Solutions, LLC 819 Mirion Technologies (MGPI), Inc 327 GOLD SPONSOR Mobile Characterization Services, LLC 1031 MRI Enterprises, LLC 602 Science Applications International Corp. (SAIC) 223 NAC International 432 Shaw Group, The 614 SILVER SPONSOR National Museum of Nuclear Science & History 833 Navarro Research and Engineering, Inc. 419 Netzsch Instruments North America, LLC 433 Siempelkamp Nuclear Technology, Inc. 113 SM&A 333 Newport News/Nuclear News (NNN) 537 BRONZE SPONSOR Spectra Tech, Inc. 506 BRONZE SPONSOR

Sperian Protection Clothing/Honeywell 932 North Wind, Inc. 632 SILVER SPONSOR SSM Industries, Inc./NewYork Blower 535 STÄUBLI Corporation 601 Nuclear Engineering International 1028 Strata - G, LLC 121 Nuclear Filter Technology 142 Strategic Packaging Systems, LLC 825 Nuclear News 929 Studsvik, Inc. 130 Nuclear Plant Journal 733 Sullivan International Group, Inc. 439 Nuclear Street - Nuclear Power Portal 934 synrocANSTO® 324 NUCON International, Inc. 710 Nukeworker.com 505 TC Program Solutions, LLC 822

88 Teledyne Brown Engineering, Inc. 633 TestAmerica, Inc. 500

Tetra Tech 622 BRONZE SPONSOR

THOR Treatment Technologies 1030 Tidewater, Inc. 723 TLI Freight Services, LLC – Semi D Toxco Materials Management Center 637 Tri-State Motor Transit 156 Turnkey Transportation 508 TW Metals - Nuclear Material Solutions 930

UltraTech International, Inc. 523 Underwater Construction Corporation 518 UniTech Services Group, Inc. 604

URS 1001 GOLD SPONSOR

URS Engineered Products Division 835 US DOE NV Site Office Environmental Mgmt 220 US DOE Office of Environmental Management 636 US DOE Office of Legacy Management 716 US DOE Office of Technology & Development - 111 US Ecology 700

Visionary Solutions, LLC – Semi B Vista Engineering Technologies, LLC 711 Vivid Learning Systems 834 VJ Technologies, Inc. 1035

Wagstaff Applied Technologies 403 Waste Control Specialists LLC 1007 Wastren Advantage, Inc. (WAI) 126 Wells Fargo Insurance Services 134 Westerman Nuclear 435 Westinghouse Electric Company 618 Weston Solutions, Inc. 424 WorleyParson Polestar 828 Wright Industries Inc., A Doerfer Company 926

Zeosorb LLC 827 Notes

89 90 EXHIBITORS LISTED BY BOOTH NUMBER

102 Central Research Laboratories 417 DeNuke Contracting Services, Inc. 107 Inventure Laboratories, Inc. 418 Cutting Edge Services Corporation 108 Bartlett Services, Inc. 419 Navarro Research and Engineering, Inc. 109 Cartwright Engineers 421 Ceradyne, Inc. 111 US DOE Office of Technology & Development 422 Reef Industries, Inc. 113 Siempelkamp Nuclear Technology, Inc. 424 Weston Solutions, Inc. 114 IMPACT Services, Inc. 426 ALS Environmental 115 Federal Engineers and Constructors (FE&C) 428 Columbiana Hi Tech 117 DEMCO, Inc. 430 Environmental Dimensions, inc. (EDi) 121 Strata - G, LLC 432 NAC International 122 Rolls-Royce 433 Netzsch Instruments North America, LLC 123 Greenfield Logistics 434 GEOVARIANCES 124 Brandenburg Industrial Service Company 435 Westerman Nuclear 125 B & B Environmental Safety, Inc. 436 E2 Consulting Engineers, Inc. 126 Wastren Advantage, Inc. (WAI) 437 Arup 127 American DND, Inc. 438 AMEC 128 Fuji Electric Systems Co., Ltd. 439 Sullivan International Group, Inc. 130 Studsvik, Inc. 132 Paragon D&E 500 TestAmerica, Inc. 134 Wells Fargo Insurance Services 501 Quality Inspection Services, Inc. 136 Aerotek 502 S.A. Technology 138 AECOM 503 American Crane & Equipment Corporation 142 Nuclear Filter Technology 504 Project Services Group, LLC (PSG) 144 Dekker, Ltd. 505 Nukeworker.com 146 Mandall BarrierWorks/ArmorWorks 506 Spectra Tech, Inc. 156 Tri-State Motor Transit 507 R.W. Wiesener, Inc. 158 Austin Master Services LLC 508 Turnkey Transportation 162 GE Hitachi Nuclear Energy 509 Getinge La Calhene 165 RMD Instruments Corp. 510 Applied Research Center 511 InTomes Technical Services Inc. 200 Brokk 511 RJR Engineering, P.C. 205 Safety & Ecology Corporation (SEC) 514 Parsons 215 Petersen, Inc. 515 S.M. Stoller Corporation, The 220 US DOE NV Site Office Environmental Mgmt 517 Attention IT, Inc. 221 ISO PACIFIC Nuclear Assay Systems, Inc. 518 Underwater Construction Corporation 223 Science Applications Intl Corp. (SAIC) 519 Cast Transportation 227 Clauss Construction 520 ENERCON 521 Container Technologies Industries, LLC 301 AREVA 523 UltraTech International, Inc. 309 Perma-Fix Environmental Services, Inc. 532 General Plastics Manufacturing Company 315 MACTEC 534 Porvair Filtration Group Ltd. – Microfiltrex Div. 319 Barnhart Nuclear Services 535 SSM Industries, Inc./NewYork Blower 320 Babcock Services, Inc 536 Off-Site Recovery Project at LANL 322 Berkeley Nucleonics Corporation 537 Newport News Nuclear News, Inc. (NNN) 323 ABW Technologies, Inc. 538 Pajarito Scientific Corporation 324 synrocANSTO® 539 Perkins Specialized Trans. Contracting 325 Premier Technology, Inc. 327 Mirion Technologies (MGPI), Inc 600 Hot Cell Services 331 IBC Advanced Technologies, Inc. 601 STÄUBLI Corporation 333 SM&A 602 MRI Enterprises, LLC 335 CSS-Dynamac 602 PIERCAN, Inc 337 Hanyang University Holdings Co., Ltd. 603 Ascendent, LLC 604 UniTech Services Group, Inc. 401 Pentek, Inc. 605 ECC 403 Wagstaff Applied Technologies 608 DW James Consulting, LLC 405 Eberline Services, Inc. 609 KoneCranes Nuclear Equipment & Services 409 CDM 610 Burns and Roe 411 Commodore Advanced Sciences, Inc. 611 Robatel Technologies LLC 415 Diversified Metal Products, Inc 614 Shaw Group, The

91 615 American Radiation Svcs (ARS International) 934 Nuclear Street - Nuclear Power Portal 617 ORTEC 618 Westinghouse Electric Company 1001 URS 619 ATI Nuclear Energy 1007 Waste Control Specialists LLC 622 Tetra Tech 1013 Mega-Tech Services, LLC 623 Mid Columbia Engineering Inc. 1019 I.C.E. Service Group, Inc. 632 North Wind, Inc. 1025 SA Mays, LLC 633 Teledyne Brown Engineering, Inc. 1026 Alaron Nuclear Services 635 Container Products Corporation 1027 Environmental Rail Solutions, Inc. 636 US DOE Office of Environmental Management 1028 Nuclear Engineering International 637 Toxco Materials Management Center 1030 THOR Treatment Technologies 1031 Mobile Characterization Services, LLC 700 US Ecology 1033 Metal Solutions Design & Fabrication, LLC 701 EnergySolutions 1035 VJ Technologies, Inc. 704 GEL Laboratories, LLC 706 Plant Decommissioning Semi B Visionary Solutions, LLC 708 Longenecker & Associates, Inc. Semi D TLI Freight Services, LLC 710 NUCON International, Inc. 711 Vista Engineering Technologies, LLC 713 Cavanagh Services Group, Inc. Fundraising Raffle for 714 Golder Associates Inc. 716 US DOE Office of Legacy Management Roy G. Post Foundation 717 Cabrera Services, Inc. 718 ICx Radiation Be sure to purchase your raffle tickets for the Roy 720 PacTec, Inc. G. Post Foundation’s Fundraising Raffle. The list of 723 Tidewater, Inc. donated items includes stays at the Hilton Suites 725 Major Tool and Machine, Inc. Phoenix and Hyatt Regency Phoenix; a Golf 727 Eastern Technologies, Inc. Assessory Package donated by Newport News 729 GoldSim Technology Group Nuclear; a deluxe Gift Basket donated by Turnkey 731 Frham Safety Products, Inc. Transportation; a BBQ set donated by ATI Nuclear 732 PaR Systems, Inc. Energy and gift certificates to Dicks Sporting Goods 733 Nuclear Plant Journal Stores donated by DeNuke and much more. 735 Columbia Energy & Environmental Services 736 Industrial Tomography Systems PLC 738 Remotec/Northrup Grumman

810 Dade Moeller & Associates 819 Savannah River Nuclear Solutions, LLC 822 TC Program Solutions, LLC 824 CETCO 825 Strategic Packaging Systems, LLC 827 Zeosorb LLC 828 WorleyParson Polestar 829 Alliant Corporation 830 Eichrom Technologies LLC 832 Pace Analytical Services, Inc. 833 National Museum of Nuclear Science & History 834 Vivid Learning Systems 835 URS Engineered Products Division Raffle Tickets are just $10 each or five for $40 and are available at the Registration Desk. 900 MHF Services 919 Fluor The Roy G. Post Foundation is a non-profit 924 Marshallton Research Laboratories, Inc. organization formed by his students, peers and 926 Wright Industries Inc., A Doerfer Company protégés to provide scholarships to students to 927 Radwaste Solutions develop careers in the safe management of nuclear 929 Nuclear News materials and to participate in the annual WM 930 TW Metals - Nuclear Material Solutions Symposium. 931 Joseph Oat Corporation 932 Sperian Protection Clothing/Honeywell 933 CH2M HILL

92 WM2011 Exhibitors in Alphabetical Order

ABW Technologies, Inc. Decontamination, Service Level I Coatings, Waste Contact: Kelsey Bondelid Booth #: 323 Handling, Facility Access, Contaminated Equipment 6720 191st Place, NE, Arlington, WA 98223 Storage and Special Projects. P: 360-618-4431 F: 360-618-4444 Email: [email protected] Alliant Corporation Website: www.abwtec.com Contact: Tabatha Hammond Booth #: 829 320 N. Cedar Bluff Rd, Ste 200, Knoxville, TN 37923 ABW specializes in custom metal fabrication and P: 865-934-2222 F: 865-769-0946 systems integration for the Nuclear Industry. ABW is Email: [email protected] experienced in Shipping Packages, Gloveboxes, Website: www.alliantcorp.com Mechanical Equipment and Vessels. ABW’s mature NQA-1 Program and reputation for excellence, makes Alliant Corporation, a service disabled veteran owned them the preferred fabricator for clients nationwide. small business, provides customer-focused professional environmental, health and safety AECOM management and project control services for Contact: Susan A. Walter Booth #: 138 commercial and government clients, always within 117A Broadway Ave, Oak Ridge, TN 37830 budget and schedule, with consistently high rates of P: 865-220-7760 F: 865-481-3834 customer satisfaction. Alliant's success is built upon Email: [email protected] integrity, competency, dependability and flexibility. Website: www.aecom.com ALS Environmental AECOM - a global provider of professional technical Contact: Claudia Stull Booth #: 426 and management support services to a broad range 10450 Stancliff Rd, Suite 210, Houston, TX 77099 of markets including energy, environment, facilities, P: 270-422-1506 F: 270-422-1507 water and government. A Fortune 500 company Email: [email protected] delivering global reach, local knowledge, innovation Website: www.alsglobal.com and technical excellence in solutions that create, enhance and sustain the world's built, natural and ALS provides complete Environmental Analyses, social environments. Radiochemistry, Industrial Hygiene/Air Quality, Stack Testing, Asbestos, Dioxin/Furan/Congeners, Aerotek Emergents, Explosives, Agent Degradation, Mycology Contact: Allyson Curran Booth #: 136 services from 6 US facilities and global network of 7301 Parkway Dr., Hanover, MD 21076 over 40 environmental laboratories in 20 countries. P: 410-579-3063 F: 410-540-7521 NELAP, DOD ELAP, DOECAP, APHIS, AIHA, State Email: [email protected] approval. Celebrating over 33 years of service in the Website: www.aerotek.com US.

Aerotek Government Services serves government AMEC agencies, integrators and contractors with talent Contact: Vickie Maranville Booth #: 438 management, program support and managed 8519 Jefferson NE, Albuquerque, NM 87113 services solutions. Whether you are meeting cyclical P: 505-821-1801 F: 505-821-7373 or surge demands or require additional personnel for Email: [email protected] entry level to senior staff positions, Aerotek can help Website: www.amec.com you execute programs and tasks almost anywhere in the world. AMEC provides high quality consulting and engineering services to clients throughout the world. Alaron Nuclear Services Headquartered in London, AMEC offers clients a Contact: Scott Eckler Booth #: 1026 diverse skill set and complete array of services 2138 State Rt 18, Wampum, PA 16157 covering air, land and water. With over 25,000 P: 724-535-5777 F: 724-535-1165 people worldwide, AMEC’s one of the largest Email: [email protected] or consulting firms in the world. [email protected] Website: www.alaron-nuclear.com

Alaron Nuclear Services is a subsidiary of Veolia ES Technical Solutions. Alaron provides a complete range of services to companies engaged in the nuclear marketplace. Services include, but are not limited to: Pump and Motor Refurbishment,

93 American Crane & Equipment Corporation Applied Research Center Contact: Karen Norheim Booth #: 503 Contact: Leonel Lagos, Ph.D., PMP Booth #: 510 531 Old Swede Rd, Douglassville, PA 19518 10555 W. Flager St, Suite 2100, Miami, FL 33174 P: 610-385-6061 F: 610-385-3191 P: 305-348-1810 F: 305-348-1852 Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Website: www.americancrane.com Website: www.arc.fiu.edu

American Crane & Equipment Corporation is a leading Florida International University’s (FIU’s) Applied provider of cranes, hoists, manipulatorsand Research Center is a university based research center specialized lift systems. Customers include located in Miami, Florida. Since 1995, ARC has commercial nuclear plants, DOE facilities, DOE supported DOE’s environmental restoration mission laboratoriesand defense facilities. American Crane's by conducting applied research in key DOE-EM recent focus has been supplying cranes and technical areas such as Decontamination & replacement trolleys/hoists for dry spent fuel storage Decommissioning, Waste Processing and Soil & and radioactive waste remediation. Critical lift cranes Groundwater. In 2007, DOE and FIU established having enhanced crane control features are also the DOE-FIU Science & Technology Workforce being supplied for material handling of critical Development Program; this unique program is equipment. designed to develop a “pipeline” of minority scientists & engineers students (called DOE Fellows) specifically American DND, Inc. trained and mentor to join federal or private Contact: Bill Schaab Booth #: 127 sector workforce. PO Box 533 , Grand Island, NY 14072-0553 P: 866-699-5515 F: 716-773-5515 Email: [email protected] Website: www.AmericanDND.com

American DND performs SAFE Environmental Remediation, Demolition & Nuclear Decommissioning. As a Service Disabled Veteran and Small Business, we also help clients comply with diversity and set- aside Programs. Our management team possess AREVA – Silver Sponsor extensive "lessons learned" from performing over Contact: Tammy Pattison Booth #: 301 $400M of D-N-D work at over 500 projects over the 800 Research Parkway, Meriden, CT O6450 past 30 years. Radiological Decommissioning projects P: 203-639-2148 F: 203-235-1347 have been performed at Yankee Nuclear Facilities, Email: [email protected] Oak Ridge Plants, Savannah River Site, Fernald, Website: www.areva.com Rocky Flats, DOE, DOD, & CE Projects. When it comes to decommissioning work, American DND is AREVA - one company, many solutions. With THE BEST RESOURCE you can use for your project. manufacturing facilities in 41 countries and a sales network in more than 100, AREVA offers customers American Radiation Services, Inc. (ARS reliable technological solutions for CO2-free power International) generation and electricity transmission and Contact: Kimberly Brewer Booth #: 615 distribution. AREVA is the world leader in nuclear 2609 N. River Rd., Port Allen, LA 70767 power and the only company to cover all industrial P: 225-381-2991 F: 225-381-2996 activities in this field. It’s 61,000 employees are Email: [email protected] committed to continuous improvement on a daily Website: www.amrad.com basis, making sustainable development the focal point of the group's industrial strategy. AREVA American Radiation Services, Inc. (dba ARS Federal Services draws from all of AREVA's International) is an 8(a) certified, Native/American, capabilities to offer integrated solutions that provide Veteran Owned Small Disadvantaged Business safe, innovative and reliable products and services to offering the following services: Environmental meet the needs of our federal customers. Remediation Services, Analytical Services, Mobile Laboratory Services, Demolition/Deactivation/Decontamination Services, Health Physicist Services, Hazardous Waste Management Services, Field Sampling Services, as well as additional environmental services.

94  

 

95  Arup and shipping disposition of the container. eMWaste® Contact: Chi-Fung Tso Booth #: 437 is composed of seven suites and offers LIMS, 13 Fitzroy St., London, W1T 4BQ United Kingdom Processor, Disposition, Document Control, Dispatch, P: 44-20-7755-2193 F: 44-20-7755-2150 Project Management and Contract Management to Email: [email protected] or our customers. [email protected] Website: www.arup.com Austin Master Services LLC Contact: John Bement Booth #: 158 Arup is one of the largest firms of designers, 1157 Phoenixville PA, Suite 102 engineers and technical specialists offering a West Chester PA, 19380 P: 610-430-6920 wide range of services across many disciplines. Since Website: www.austinmasterservices.com our early groundbreaking research into the impact performance of the Magnox spent fuel flask, we have Austin Master Services is a full-service, stayed at the forefront in the application of advanced comprehensive environmental services firm computational methods to the design and analyses of specializing in radiological waste management packages. solutions, including remediation, D&D and transportation and disposal. We provide professional Ascendent, LLC safety, industrial hygiene and health physics Contact: Eric Clements Booth #: 603 services. Based in West Chester, Pennsylvania, we PO Box 4297, Johnson City, TN 37602-4297 serve commercial clients and government agencies P: 866-942-3316 F: 423-610-8446 nationwide. Email: [email protected] Website: www.ascendentllc.com B & B Environmental Safety, Inc. Contact: Kenneth S. Baugh Booth #: 125 Ascendent, LLC is a premier provider of high-quality, 17416 Murphy Parkway, Lathrop, CA 95330 hard to find professional and technical resources in P: 209-858-4888 F: 209-858-4877 the commercial & DOE sectors. Ascendent currently Email: [email protected] supports several large staff augmentation contracts, Website: www.bbensafety.com providing resources in engineering, design, safety, environmental, waste management and BBES is a SMALL BUSINESS located in Northern decommissioning. California’s Central Valley. Our staff is experienced in environmental safety and mixed waste remediation; ATI Nuclear Energy from contract management to free release of Contact: Mike Grigsby Booth #: 619 property. We provide radiological/mixed waste PO Box 460, 1600 Old Salem Rd, NE brokerage, regulatory consulting, license closures, Albany, OR 97321 training and operations. We are an 8(a), MBE, DBE, P: 541-967-6959 F: 541-967-6994 VOB, SDVOB Company. Email: [email protected] W: www.alleghenytechnologies.com/nuclearenergy Babcock Services, Inc Contact: Phil Gallagher Booth #: 320 ATI Nuclear Energy offers the widest array of 8113 W. Quinault Ave., Kennewick, WA 99336 advanced metallic solutions for nuclear applications in P: 509-737-0812 F: 509-737-0813 the specialty metals industry, satisfying Email: [email protected] uncompromising requirements for corrosion Website: www.babcockservices.com resistance, radiation shielding, quality, strength & performance. Babcock Services, Inc. is a small business specializing in providing high quality professional Attention IT, Inc. services to the nuclear industry. BSI also performs Contact: Jeanice Pratt Booth #: 517 the Design/Fabrication/ Operating of specialized 1704 Schaeffer Rd., Knoxville, TN 37932 volume reduction equipment. Our international client P: 865-769-8888 F: 865-769-8931 base includes government contractors to commercial Email: [email protected] nuclear power generators supporting Restart, Website: www.attentionit.com Operations, Maintenance and Remediation projects.

The eMWaste® Primary Suite is the only web-based COTS software that tracks hazardous, radioactive and mixed waste. eMWaste® provides electronic "cradle to grave" tracking of profiles, container certification, characterization, inventory, processing, treatment, overpack, shipping and disposal operations. All this while keeping a full historical record of container movements, processes, parent/daughter processes

96 Barnhart Nuclear Services Star Member in OSHA’s prestigious Voluntary Contact: Art Porter Booth #: 319 Protection Program (VPP). 2163 Airways Blvd, Memphis, TN 38114 P: 901-775-3000 Brokk Email: [email protected] Contact: Tony Marlow Booth #: 200 Website: www.barnhartnuclear.com 1 Coral Bell Ct , Santa Fe, NM 87508 P: 505-699-8923 F: 480-287-8709 Barnhart has built an impressive nuclear project Email: [email protected] resumé. Our team of nuclear experts have Website: www.brokkinc.com backgrounds from both the construction and operations side of the nuclear industry. Barnhart's Brokk remotely controlled machines are proven experience has brought the kind of innovative design effective for a broad range of applications including and execution that makes money in reducing Critical demolition, size reduction, sorting and containerizing Path components in containment. radioactive waste. They allow workers to operate at safe distances from high radiation or hazardous Bartlett Services, Inc. environments. Our machines have easily Contact: Lauren Buckman Booth #: 108 interchangeable attachments and can be customized 60 Industrial Park Rd, Plymouth, MA O2360 to meet specific project requirements. P: 508-591-1149 F: 508-591-1397 Email: [email protected] Burns and Roe Website: www.bartlettservices.com Contact: Ted Gado Booth #: 610 800 Kinderkamack Rd, Oradell, NJ O7649 Bartlett Services, Inc. is a leading provider of P: 201-986-4142 F: 201-986-4335 radiation safety, professional and technical, D&D and Email: [email protected] environmental management solutions with over 28 Website: www.roe.com years of experience serving government facilities and contractors. We offer complete project management Burns and Roe is a global engineering, procurement and implementation, quality personnel, and construction organization providing services to contamination control materials and other both private and public clients for 78 years. With decontamination technologies to support our clients’ 1,700 personnel worldwide, we are a premier needs. provider of nuclear services to the DOE, utilities and other clients. Berkeley Nucleonics Corporation Contact: Robert Corsetti Booth #: 322 2955 Kerner Blvd, San Rafael, CA 94901 P: 415-453-9955 F: 415-453-9956 Email: [email protected] Website: www.berkeleynucleonics.com Cabrera Services, Inc. – Silver Sponsor Our nuclear spectroscopy and radiation detection Contact: Shannan Ryll Booth #: 717 products now serve a broad cross-section of 473 Silver Lane, East Hartford, CT O6118 industries involved in environmental monitoring, P: 860-569-0095 F: 860-569-0277 health physics, emergency response and power Email: [email protected] generation. BNC has recently begun offering a Website: www.cabreraservices.com nationwide radiation detection, surveillance and measurement training program, providing attendees Cabrera Services, Inc. is a SBA-certified small with a comprehensive understanding of principles minority-owned business providing full-service and techniques for isotope identification and analysis. environmental remediation services for hazardous, toxic and radioactive waste (HTRW) sites. Cabrera Brandenburg Industrial Service Company specializes in radiological engineering and Contact: John O'Keefe Booth #: 124 remediation, radioactive waste management, 2625 S. Loomis St, Chicago, IL 60608 environmental engineering, MARSSIM/TRIAD survey P: 800-932-2869 F: 800-807-0625 design and implementation, on-site measurement & Email: [email protected] analysis and MEC/UXO response and range support. Website: www.brandenburg.com

Brandenburg is one of the nation’s premier demolition contractors. We specialize in demolition, asbestos abatement, hazardous materials removal, soil remediation and dynamic compaction. We are the first demolition contractor to successfully complete OSHA’s Challenge Program and to be certified as a

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98 Cartwright Engineers CDM maintains the size, stability and resources Contact: Craig Cartwright Booth #: 109 required to successfully undertake a diverse range of 595 S Riverwoods Parkway, Logan, UT 84321 projects. Our full range of comprehensive services P: 435-753-2850 includes architectural and engineering design, Email: [email protected] environmental management and planning, Website: www. cartwrightengineers.com transportation, management consulting, information management and construction. Projects range from Established in 1978, Cartwright Engineers is an small, short-term solutions to complex, ongoing engineering consulting services firm providing environmental and infrastructure management Structural and Civil Engineering support to demolition programs, with a common focus: CDM’s driving contractors supporting the DOE and other related philosophy of providing exceptional client service and industries. Our engineers have extensive project building long-term relationships. experience on project sites including the Bevatron demolition at LBNL, several sites at Hanford and Central Research Laboratories LANL. Contact: Jens Nestingen Booth #: 102 3965 Pepin Ave., Red Wing, MN 55125 Cast Transportation P: 651-388-3565 F: 651-385-2109 Contact: Blake Burns Booth #: 519 Email: [email protected] 9850 Havana St., Henderson, CO 80640-8443 Website: www.centres.com P: 303-534-6376 F: 303-853-3377 Email: [email protected] Central Research Laboratories designs and Website: www.casttrans.com manufactures equipment and systems for the safe and efficient handling of hazardous materials in a CAST Transportation is a motor carrier handling remote environment. This includes telemanipulators Heavy Haul, Hazmat, LL Waste, Flatbed, Lowboy & and glove ports for dexterous handling and waste Chemical Tanker movements. Cast operates a Rail drum transfer systems for sealed repeatable Transload Center from its tracks on the BNSF at transfers of materials across containment Irondale Station (Denver, CO). Participant in the boundaries. WIPP Program and has been a privately held company since 1948. Ceradyne, Inc. Contact: Elizabeth Utley Booth #: 421 Cavanagh Services Group, Inc. 3250 S. 614 Rd., Quapaw, OK 74363 Contact: Amanda Hansen Booth #: 713 P: 918-673-2201 F: 918-673-2309 261 E. 300 S, Suite 200, Salt Lake City, UT 84111 Email: [email protected] P: 801-532-2272 F: 801-532-0155 Website: www.ceradyne.com Email: [email protected] Website: www.cav-services.com Ceradyne, Inc. provides BORAL®, BorAluminum®, BORTEC® MMC, Enriched Iron Boride and Cavanagh Services Group, Inc. (“Cavanagh”), the BoroBond™ materials for wet and dry SNF storage, DOE 2009 8(a)/SDB small business of the year, fresh fuel transport, neutron absorption and shielding specializes in integrated project management and applications. Strong technical expertise and ability to transportation logistics services supporting the supply the Boron 10 isotope provides Ceradyne a radioactive, hazardous, non-hazardous environmental unique position for fuel cycle and waste stream remediation and D&D markets. Cavanagh’s services management. include waste management, project management, field support, packaging, transportation logistics, CETCO treatment and disposal of waste. Contact: Dave Daze Booth #: 824 1001 S. Linwood Ave., Santa Ana, CA 92705 CDM P: 714-448-4313 Contact: David Wallace Booth #: 409 Email: [email protected] 800 Oak Ridge Turnpike, Suite 200-B Website: www.cetco.com/rtg Oak Ridge, TN 37830 P: 865-482-1065 F: 865-481-3835 CETCO provides cost-effective engineered solutions Email: [email protected] to challenging environmental remediation projects Website: www.cdm.com worldwide used for in-situ and ex-situ treatment of contaminated sediments, solidification/stabilization of CDM is a global consulting, engineering, construction hazardous wastes, as well as systems for gas vapor and operations firm delivering exceptional service to mitigation. federal, state, public and private clients worldwide. An employee-owned corporation with $1 billion in annual revenues and a multi-disciplinary staff of about 4,500 in more than 100 offices worldwide,

99 CH2M HILL Commodore Advanced Sciences, Inc. Contact: Dave Oren Booth #: 933 Contact: Walt Foutz Booth #: 411 9191 S. Jamacia St., Englewood, CO 80112 9769 W. 119th Dr, Suite 31, Broomfield, CO 80021 P: 720-286-2016 F: 720-286-9002 P: 303-421-1511 F: 303-463-4833 Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Website: www.ch2m.com Website: www.commodore.com

CH2M HILL is a global leader in full-service program Commodore Advanced Sciences is a Small Business management, engineering, construction and established in New Mexico in 1977, with offices in operations for government, civil, industrial and Oak Ridge, Denver and Boston. Commodore energy clients. We provide innovative clean up and specializes in environmental monitoring and sampling closure solutions for contaminated sites in the US and services, compliance sampling, biological monitoring, abroad, while successfully and safely delivering habitat assessment , benthic laboratory services and projects ahead of schedule and under budget. waste treatment services targeting sodium-bearing waste, PCB waste and LLMW. Clauss Construction Contact: Patrick Clauss Booth #: 227 Container Products Corporation 8956 Winter Gardens Blvd., Lakeside, CA 92040 Contact: Mike Lewis Booth #: 635 P: 619-390-4940 112 North College Rd., Wilmington, NC 28406 Email: [email protected] P: 910-392-6100 F: 910-392-6778 Website: www.claussconstruction.com Email: [email protected] Website: www.c-p-c.com Environmental Remediation D&D Contractor. Container Products Corporation has been providing Columbia Energy and Environmental Services, containers, compactors and decontamination Inc. equipment to the nuclear industry since 1981. CPC is Contact: Mark Morgan Booth #: 735 the largest and most experienced producer of LLW 1806 Terminal Dr., Richland, WA 99354 containers in the US and its compactors and P: 509-946-7111 F: 509-946-9365 decontamination equipment are located throughout Email: [email protected] the world. Website: www.columbia-energy.com Container Technologies Industries, LLC Columbia Energy is a woman-owned, full-service Contact: Scott Burchfield Booth #: 521 engineering company with an approved NQA-1 375 Marcum Parkway, Helenwood, TN 37755 program in Richland, WA offering: Engineering & P: 423-569-2800 x24 F: 423-569-2806 Design; Environmental & Regulatory Consulting; Email: [email protected] technology development & full-scale testing; waste Website: www.containertechnologies.com process & groundwater modeling; Subsurface Geophysical Exploration and I&C system design. Container Technologies leads the industry in the Products include a transportable evaporator, LLW design, testing and manufacturing of IP-1, IP-II and solidification process and hose-in-hose transfer lines. 7A containers. ASME NQA-1 compliant and approved We recently completed designs for a Wiped Film for US Government applications. AWS D1.1, D1.3 Evaporator; Transportable Exhauster; and Mobile certified. Certified Welding Inspector (CWI) on staff. Arm Retrieval System for Hanford’s HLW tank farms. CSS-Dynamac Columbiana Hi Tech Contact: Tim Hall Booth #: 335 Contact: Don Olson Booth #: 428 6505 Santolina Cove, Austin, TX 78731-2806 1802 Fairfax Rd., Greensboro, NC 27407 P: 512-241-0636 F: 512-241-0636 P: 336-852-5679 F: 336-852-6149 Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Website: www.css-dynamac.com Website: www.chtnuclear.com Consolidated Safety Services, together with its CHT provides specialized manufacturing and services subsidiary Dynamac Corporation (CSS-Dynamac), is for the nuclear industry, producing containers and a 400-person science-driven consulting firm with related products to transport and store spent nuclear offices across the country. We bring 40+ years of fuel. Specialized equipment for the spent fuel experience in addressing five core competencies and industry includes lead lined dry transfer casks, cross-cutting services: Environment, Safety & canister assemblies for MTR and TRIGA fuel, spent Health, Emergency Respond & Disaster Recovery, fuel cask lifting yoke assemblies and specialized Natural Resources Management, Transportation handling and storage equipment. Safety & Security, and Earth, Space & Life Sciences.

100 Cutting Edge Services Corporation DEMCO, Inc. was established in 1994 and has Contact: Tim Beckman Booth #: 418 matured into a nationally recognized 1535 Old SR 74, Batavia, OH 45103 Decontamination & Decommissioning contracting firm P: 513-388-0199 F: 513-732-1248 that performs multi-facedted remediation/demolition Email: [email protected] projects for the US Government and Fortune 500 Website: www.cuttingedgeservices.com Companies. DEMCO addresses the complex radiological, chemical and hazardous materials found Cutting Edge Services provides engineered solutions in nuclear facilities, refineries, chemical plants and for cutting or drilling of concrete and metal manufacturing facilities and utilizes the specialized structures. We design and fabricate special tools to expertise of its trained work force to safely and augment our nuclear field services, including efficiently complete each project. diamond wire cutting of SG sections and solid turbine shafts, diamond drilling of bioshield walls and water DeNuke Contracting Services, Inc. powered pole saw cutting of steel in pools. Contact: Heather Jones Booth #: 417 704 S. Illinois Ave, Ste C-203, Oak Ridge, TN 37830 Dade Moeller & Associates P: 865-220-0046 F: 865-220-0064 Contact: Krista Alley Booth #: 810 Email: [email protected] 1835 Terminal Dr, Suite 200, Richland, WA 99354 Website: www.denuke.com P: 509-946-0410 F: 509-946-4412 Email: [email protected] DeNuke is committed to distinctive quality and Website: www.moellerinc.com unparalleled customer service in all aspects of their business. They provide turnkey staffing and Dade Moeller is an award-winning, employee-owned recruiting services for nuclear facility D&D, business specializing in occupational and radioactive and mixed waste management, radiation environmental health sciences. We provide protection program development and implementation professional consulting services for assessing, and specialized training, including curriculum preventing and controlling harmful exposures from development and instruction (DOE, DOT and OSHA). radiation and hazardous substances that affect DeNuke has current qualifications in Environmental workers, the public and the environment. Our Services, Radiological Engineering/Health Physics, exceptional record of performance has resulted in Health and Safety and Nuclear Staffing. DeNuke’s one of the highest client and employee retention Mission: “We pledge to support our clients by rates in our industry. Dade Moeller employs more providing safe and knowledgeable staff at fair prices. than 25 Certified Health Physicists and has close, long-standing affiliations with national and Diversified Metal Products, Inc international health physics organizations. Contact: Dan Payne Booth #: 415 3710 N. Yellowstone Hwy, Idaho Falls, ID 83403 Dekker, Ltd. P: 208-529-9655 F: 208-529-9836 Contact: Steven Windley Booth #: 144 Email: [email protected] 3633 E. Inland Empire Blvd, Suite 450 Website: www.diversifiedmetal.com Ontario, CA 91764 P: 909-384-9000 F: 909-889-9163 Diversified Metal Products provides fabricating Email: [email protected] services to the nuclear industry. Our 60,000 sq ft Website: www.dekkerltd.com manufacturing facility and highly trained staff have the ability to handle any project. Our attention to Dekker, Ltd. has provided program and project quality and NQA-1 adherence, has been verified by management support for environmental and cleanup the industry leading DOE Prime Contractors. efforts for over 25 years. With the Dekker PMIS™ (Program Management Information System), DW James Consulting, LLC government agencies and contractors can integrate Contact: David James Booth #: 608 monitoring and controlling processes on multiple 855 Village Ctr Dr, Ste 330, North Oaks, MN 55127 projects and benefit from improved handling of P: 651-482-7556 F: 901-339-2070 scope, cost, schedule, resource, financial, risk and Email: [email protected] Earned Value Management. Website: www.dwjames.com

DEMCO, Inc. DW James Consulting provides technical services for Contact: Kevin Callahan Booth #: 117 characterization of radioactive materials and wastes. 238 Lein Rd, West Seneca, NY 14223 Services include software for the preparation of P: 716-674-0883 F: 716-674-0884 shipping documentation and scaling factor analysis, Email: [email protected] characterization and shipping training, activated Website: www.demcoinc.com component analyisis, decommissioning program support to both to US commercial and government clients as well as international customers.

101 E2 Consulting Engineers, Inc. Eberline Services, Inc. Contact: Vanessa Vanover-Hatfield Booth #: 436 Contact: Veronica Ybarra Booth #: 405 151 Fabian Dr., Aiken, SC 29803 7021 Pan American Freeway, NE P: 803-642-5990 x229 F: 803-642-8550 Albuquerque, NM 87109 Email: [email protected] P: 505-262-2694 F: 505-262-2698 Website: www.e2.com Email: [email protected] Website: www.eberlineservices.com E2 Consulting Engineers, Inc. is a Minority-Owned, SDB offering government and private-sector clients a Eberline Services, Inc. has provided radiological and full spectrum of professional services, including environmental services to clients nationwide for more infrastructure operations & maintenance, facility than 60 years. The company offers specialized operations, engineering and design, environmental expertise in radioactive and hazardous waste engineering and project and construction management, radiological characterization and management. We deliver our services with technical analysis and environmental, safety and health innovation, teamwork, rapid response and reliability. management. The company's analytical laboratory network performs radiochemistry and environmental analytical laboratory services.

ECC Contact: Robert MacDonald Booth #: 605 1240 Bayshore Hwy, Burlingame, CA 94010 P: 650-347-1555 x151 Email: [email protected] Website: www.ecc.net

Since 1985, ECC has been solving complex environmental problems in the US and abroad. ECC provides comprehensive and cost-effective design- build, construction, engineering, environmental remediation, munitions response, closure and O&M services. With more than 500 professionals and 17 offices worldwide, we secure and complete a variety of large-scale, multi-faceted concurrent projects, Eastern Technologies, Inc. providing our customers with optimal solutions. Contact: John Steward, CHP Booth #: 727 215 - 2nd Ave., Ashford, AL 36312 Eichrom Technologies LLC/Nuclear Power P: 972-523-9988 F: 334-899-2310 Outfitters LLC Email: [email protected] Contact: Lawrence Jassin Booth #: 830 Website: www.orex.com 1955 University Lane, Lisle, IL 60532 P: 630-963-0320 F: 630-963-1928 Eastern Technologies Incorporated (ETI) is uniquely Email: [email protected] positioned to provide solutions to all your protective Website: www.eichrom.com clothing needs. With the continued advancement of our OREX line of protective clothing and related Eichrom Technologies and Nuclear Power Outfitters products ETI also has the ability to provide state of provide the nuclear industry with expertise in metal the art single use garments the far exceed industry separation technologies (resins), engineered ALARA standard. The revolutionary OREX Ultra coveralls solutions and high resolution alpha/beta filters. With have made possible historically low personnel over 50 years of combined experience, our customers contaminations at several nuclear power plants over enjoy access to our lines of extraction resins, the past 12 months. ETI also operates the most radiation shielding/ deployment systems, shielded technologically advanced radiological laundry in the booths, containment buildings, contamination control world. products, NAMs, NIOSH approved SARs and sampling smears. With full manufacturing, chemical and radiochemical support laboratories and an ISO 9001:2008 registered quality system; we are your source for Separations and ALARA Engineered Solutions.

102 ENERCON Environmental Dimensions, inc. (EDi) Contact: Keith Mahosky Booth #: 520 Contact: Molly Mooney Booth #: 430 4490 Old William Penn Hwy, Murrysville, PA 15668 1901 Candelaria Rd, PO Box 6250 P: 724-733-8711 F: 724-325-6383 Albuquerque, NM 87107 Email: [email protected] P: 505-341-3578 F: 505-341-3579 Website: www.enercon.com Email: [email protected] Website: www.edi-nm.com With 18 offices nationwide, ENERCON is the premier nuclear utility engineering and licensing firm in the EDi provides technical support services ranging from US and one of the Top 140 largest environmental environmental investigation and remediation through consulting firms in the country. An employee-owned facility operations. We began providing radiological company, our culture drives us to provide superior control and decontamination services to DOE in 1990. customer service as individual owners. Combining We also provide services to the EPA, NASA and the this culture and these services, ENERCON has an CE, as well as Fortune 500 companies. EDi is a outstanding reputation of providing superior support woman-owned small disadvantaged business. to our commercial and government clients in a wide variety of services including: engineering; Environmental Rail Solutions, Inc. decommissioning planning and execution; Contact: David Ardito Booth #: 1027 environmental remediation and consulting; radiologic 621 Shrewsbury Ave, Suite 152 and industrial health and safety; licensing and Shrewsbury, NJ 07702 permitting; and facility siting and construction. With P: 732-212-8140 F: 732-212-8141 our SBA approved Native American protégé, EC Email: [email protected] Government Services, in addition to the previously Website: www.envrail.com mentioned services, we can offer a wide variety of equipment from PPE to small tools and industrial Environmental Rail Solutions, Inc. (ERS) is a supplies to yellow iron and material handling recognized leader in the transportation of hazardous, equipment. non-hazardous and radioactive material and has transported over 1.5 million tons of material EnergySolutions utilizing the safe and efficient rail infrastructure as Contact: Mark Walker Booth #: 701 the primary mode of transportation. As a women 423 W. 300 S, Suite 200, Salt Lake City, UT 84101 owned small business, ERS is an approved P: 801-649-2194 F: 801-413-5684 government contractor and has met the rigid Email: [email protected] qualification and performance standards of the DOE, Website: www.energysolutions.com DOD and USACE.

EnergySolutions is a leading provider of specialized Federal Engineers and Constructors (FE&C) technology based nuclear services to government Contact: Bernie Laverentz Booth #: 115 and commercial customers. We are committed to 3240 Richardson Rd, Richland, WA 99354 environmental protection, energy independence and P: 509-375-1608 F: 509-375-3427 the nuclear industry. Our services include Email: [email protected] engineering, in-plant operations, outsourced specialty Website: www.feandc.com services, spent nuclear fuel management, decontamination and decommissioning, logistics, FE&C completes highly technical and hazardous work transportation processing and disposal. with an exceptional safety and performance record. They provide environmental remediation, D&D and construction to government and commercial clients nationally and internationally. FE&C has safely performed more acreage of hands-on remediation of  nuclear waste sites than any other company in the United States. D&D Services Training Waste Management Safety and Risk Reduction Management and Operation of Nuclear Facilities Engineering

103 GE Hitachi Nuclear Energy Contact: Jerry Kusky Booth #: 162 3901 Castle Hayne Rd, Suite A30 Wilmington, NC 28401 P: 910-819-5898 F: 910-362-5898 Email: [email protected] Website: www.ge-energy.com/nuclear Fluor – Gold Sponsor Contact: Karolyn Stuver Booth #: 919 GE Hitachi Nuclear Energy Custom Fabrication in 2300 Clarendon Blvd, Suite 1110 Canonsburg, PA provides precision fabrication of Arlington, VA 22201 stainless and alloy steel components for the nuclear P: 703-647-4343 F: 571-217-0994 industry. Products include spent fuel products for dry Email: [email protected] fuel storage and transportation, code stamped Website: www.fluor.com custom parts and specialty fabrication for the US Navy Nuclear Propulsion Program and US DOE. Fluor has 60-plus years of experience in nuclear related work, starting with the Manhattan Project. We GEL Laboratories, LLC provide comprehensive capabilities in engineering, Contact: Bob Seyer Booth #: 704 procurement, construction, commissioning, 9111 Cross Park Dr, Suite D200, Knoxville, TN 37934 operations, maintenance and project management. P: 865-599-1175 F: 865-470-4090 Fluor closed Fernald in 2006, supported Hanford as a Email: [email protected] prime contractor 1996-2009 and is the lead firm in Website: www.mindspring.com the partnership managing Savannah River. Founded in 1981, our client base includes some of Frham Safety Products, Inc. the largest industrial manufacturers in the Southeast, Contact: John (Trip) McGarity Booth #: 731 72 US commercial nuclear sites, fifteen DOE sites, 171 Grayson Rd, PO Box 36098, Rock Hill, SC 29732 thirteen USACE Districts, the US Navy and Air Force. P: 803-366-5131 F: 803-366-2005 GEL provides these clients with customized analytical Email: [email protected] chemistry services including environmental Website: www.frhamsafety.com monitoring, RI/FS, RCRA investigation, NPDES analysis, hazardous and mixed waste Frham Safety Products, Inc. is a leading supplier of characterization, bioassay, decommissioning and both nuclear and industrial safety equipment remediation closure analysis. Additionally, we throughout North America. Serving both commercial perform full Part 61 and Energy Solutions Clive and governmental facilities, Frham offers innovative characterization services on samples with contact radiation and contamination protection, health doses rates up to 600 mR/hr. physics supplies, radwaste reduction items and custom manufacturing, complemented by Frham's General Plastics Manufacturing Company ability to provide a full line of industrial safety Contact: Rick Brown Booth #: 532 equipment. 4910 Burlington Way, Tacoma, WA 98409 P: 253-473-5000 F: 253-473-5104 Fuji Electric Systems Co., Ltd. Email: [email protected] Contact: Yoshihiro Yaginuma Booth #: 128 Website: www.generalplastics.com 1-1, Tanabeshinden, Kawasaki-ku, Kawasaki-city Kanagawa, 210-9530 Japan We are pioneers in the formulation of high- P: 81-44-329-2169 F: 81-44-329-2178 performance LAST-A-FOAM® cellular solid Email: [email protected] polyurethane and polyisocyanurate foam products. Website: www.fujielectric.com/fes Over the last four decades, General Plastics has earned an outstanding reputation for developing Fuji Electric Systems has a 55 year history in the unique foam-based technical solutions to difficult nuclear business field as the leading company of The problems. We specialize in high-density rigid and First Atomic Power Industry Group (FAPIG) in Japan. flexible polyurethane foams, high-performance We have characteristic nuclear technologies such as polyisocyanurate foams, energy absorbing materials, remote handling, radioactive waste treatment, fuel structural products for composite core applications, fabrication and so on. Focusing on the waste machined and molded parts and long-lasting management field, we have delivered various environmental graphics products. treatment and handling systems mainly for Japanese advanced reactor plants. Recent achievements include the development of spent resin volume reduction equipment (Fuji resin reducer: FRR).

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GEOVARIANCES safety analyses of proposed and existing radioactive Contact: Jean-Jacques Peraudin Booth #: 434 waste management sites. Countries where GoldSim 49 bis avenue Franklin Roosevelt has been applied include the US, UK, Japan, Spain, Avon, Cedex 77212 France Germany, France, Hungary, China, Taiwan, South P: 33-1-6074-9090 F: 33-1-6422-8728 Korea, Slovak Republic and Czech Republic. Email: [email protected] Website: www.geovariances.com Greenfield Logistics Contact: Joseph Johanson Booth #: 123 Geovariances is a world leader in advanced 8731 S. Sandy Pkwy, Suite 107, Sandy, UT 84070 geostatistics and provides the most complete solution P: 801-676-1575 F: 801-676-1579 in geostatistics: innovative methodologies, experts Email: [email protected] and software packages. Geovariances has put its Website: www.greenfieldlogistics.com unique expertise in the geostatistical characterization of radiological contaminations in soils or installations Greenfield Logistics is a transportation logistics to provide the nuclear decommissioning sector with company dedicated to providing the highest level of an innovative embedded GIS-based software solution service for the waste industry. With our own fleet of Kartotrak. railcars and intermodals, we can move customer's products safely and efficiently and at a very GETINGE La Calhene competitive price. Contact: Scot LaValla Booth #: 509 1325 Field Ave. S, Rush City, MN 55069 Hanyang University Holdings Co., Ltd. P: 320-358-0604 F: 320-358-3549 Contact: Yukyung Seo Booth #: 337 Email: [email protected] RM 512 HIT 5F Website: www.lacalhene.com Hanyang University, 17 Haengdang-Dong, Seongdong-Gu, Seoul, 133-791 Korea GETINGE La Calhène, the leader in Contained P: 82-2-2220-4075 F: 82-2-6442-4070 Transfer Technology. If you have a TRU waste Email: [email protected] packaging or transfer requirement, come see la Website: www.hyuholdings.co.kr Calhène, we have the safest, most cost-effective solution. Hanyang University Holdings (HYU Holdings) is the first technology holdings company in Korea. Part of Golder Associates Inc. our core business is based on Batch Method Contact: Kevin Conroy Booth #: 714 Decontamination System using Reactive Plasma 44 Union Blvd, Suite 300, Lakewood, CO 80228 Processing which has many benefits such as P: 303-980-0540 F: 303-985-2080 secondary waste decrease, high decontamination Email: [email protected] rate, remote controllable, minimize the exposure & Website: www.golder.com securing safety of employees, minimize the disposal volume, recycling of base material by selective At Golder Associates we strive to be the most decontamination, etc. respected global company providing consulting, design and construction services in earth, Hot Cell Services environment and energy. Employee owned since our Contact: Zbigniew Tomalik Booth #: 600 formation in 1960, we have created a unique culture PO Box 5729, Kent, WA 98064 with pride in ownership, resulting in long-term P: 253-854-4945 F: 253-854-4947 organizational stability. Golder professionals take the Email: [email protected] time to build an understanding of client needs and of Website: www.hotcell.com the specific environments in which they operate. We continue to expand our technical capabilities and Hot Cell Services is the worldwide leader in safe have experienced steady growth with employees who viewing solutions and maintenance for the Nuclear operate from offices located throughout Africa, Asia, and Medical Industries. We manufacture Radiation Australasia, Europe, North America and South Shielding Windows, Glove Box Windows, Glass Slabs America. and Bricks, Radiation Gaskets and supplies. We support our products with Engineering, Consulting, GoldSim Technology Group Extraction, Installation, Maintenance, Refurbishment, Contact: Rick Kossik Booth #: 729 Inspection and Diagnosis Services. 22500 SE 64th Pl, Suite 240, Issaquah, WA 98027 P: 425-295-6985 F: 425-642-8073 Email: [email protected] Website: www.goldsim.com

GoldSim is the premier tool for carrying out probabilistic performance assessments and long-term

106 107 IBC Advanced Technologies, Inc. & segregate and treatment of hazardous materials. Contact: Steve Izatt Booth #: 331 IMPACT also owns the GeoMelt technology and the 856 East Utah Valley Dr, American Fork, UT 84003 Fluid Tech family of stabilization agents. IMPACT has P: 801-763-8400 F: 801-763-8491 several facilities across both the US and Email: [email protected] internationally. Website: www.ibcmrt.com Industrial Tomography Systems PLC IBC Advanced Technologies, Inc. is a world leading Contact: Edmund Talideh Booth #: 736 fine and specialty chemicals company that develops Speakers House, 39 Deansgate and commercializes Molecular Recognition Manchester, M3 2BA United Kingdom Technology (MRT) products and processes. Molecular P: 44-161-832-9297 F: 44-161-839-5195 recognition is a process by which one chemical Email: [email protected] species shows a distinct preference for another. IBC Website: www.itoms.com provides innovative molecular recognition products to the industrial, process, environmental, analytical and Industrial Tomography Systems plc (ITS) is a world life sciences industries. leader in process tomography. The company provides a range of electrical and acoustic-based tomography I.C.E. Service Group, Inc. systems for research and process applications. Contact: Dennis Morgan Booth #: 1019 Instrumentation, software and sensors from ITS are 192 Ohio River Blvd, Suite 100 used to characterize a wide range of processes Ambridge, PA 15003-1214 including mixing, separation, nuclear waste P: 724-266-7580 F: 724-266-7583 management and characterization of waste, such as Email: [email protected] slurries and sludge. Website: www.iceservicegroup.com InTomes Technical Services Inc. I.C.E. provides packaging, transportation, logistical Contact: Joell Runge Booth #: 511 support and waste management services for both 23 Mechanic St, Springville, NY 14141 commercial and government clients. We utilize a P: 716-592-7425 F: 716-592-4216 multi-modal approach utilizing rail, truck and marine Email: [email protected] conveyances. ICE specializes in handling low level Website: www.intomes.com radioactive waste, RCRA hazardous waste, TSCA and non-hazardous waste. Our Site Services Group InTomes Technical Services Inc. (InTomes) is a provides on-site services including completion of woman owned, SBA small business providing waste profiles, design & fabrication of custom steel engineering, drafting and project management structures and packages. services in the decontamination & decommissioning markets. We operate under an NQA-1 Compliant QA ICx Radiation Program and provide staff augmentation to our Contact: Jeff Perkins Booth #: 718 clients with personnel proven in their areas of 100 Midland Rd, Oak Ridge, TN 37830 expertise. P: 865-253-3969 F: 865-220-7181 Email: [email protected] Inventure Laboratories, Inc. Website: www.icxt.com Contact: Mitch Brooks Booth #: 107 PO Box 30457, Knoxville, TN 37930 ICx Radiation is a developer, manufacturer and P: 865-531-8258 F: 865-531-9273 global provider of hand-held and fixed-position Email: [email protected] nuclear detection and radionuclide identification Website: www.safevac.net instruments and systems. ICx Radiation is known worldwide for leading the development of technology Cleaning up hazardous and nuclear materials is in the nuclear field resulting in cutting edge solutions simple, safe and effective with Inventure covering a wide range of applications and techniques. Laboratories’ patented SafeVac system. SafeVac utilizes a unique three-step collection method which IMPACT Services, Inc. has an efficiency rating of 99.999% on particles down Contact: Greg Broda Booth #: 114 to 0.12 micron. 103 Palladium Way, Oak Ridge, TN 37830 P: 865-270-6565 F: 865-270-6528 Email: [email protected] Website: www.impactservices.com

IMPACT Services, Inc. is a full service waste processing company offering it's clients a broad range of capabilities including waste packaging/characterization, thermal treatment, sort

108 ISO-PACIFIC Nuclear Assay Systems, Inc MACTEC Contact: Sheri Michaelis Booth #: 221 Contact: Kristi Shober Booth #: 315 2770 Einstein Ave, Suite 101 1105 Lakewood Pkwy, Ste 300 Alpharetta, GA 30009 Richland, WA 99354 P: 770-360-0600 F: 770-360-0631 P: 509-375-0100 F: 509-375-0101 Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Website: www.mactec.com Website: ww.isopacific.net A full-service environmental, engineering and ISO-PACIFIC is a green environmental remediation construction firm, MACTEC routinely plans and firm specializing in the physical separation of executes comprehensive, innovative solutions for radiologically contaminated soil fractions from environmental compliance, management and otherwise clean soil. Known as soil sorting, our remediation projects. MACTEC’s experience with volume reduction service can result in huge savings radiological and chemical contaminants in air, land, in the deposition and disposal of radioactive soil water and structures spans more than six decades waste stocks. and thousands of satisfied government and commercial clients. MACTEC’s progressive Joseph Oat Corporation radiological engineering and compliance methods, Contact: Crystal Harrington Booth #: 931 combined with advanced technologies and NRC 2500 Broadway, Camden, NJ 08104 Radioactive Materials License, provides unique P: 856-541-2900 benefits and streamlined efficiency to clients we Email: [email protected] serve. Website: www.josephoat.com Major Tool and Machine, Inc. KoneCranes Nuclear Equipment & Services LLC Contact: Mike Kramer Booth #: 725 Contact: David G. Schaeffer Booth #: 609 1458 E. 19th St, Indianapolis, IN 46077 126 Powerline Rd, Boyertown, PA 19512 P: 317-917-2626 F: 317-634-9420 P: 610-368-8389 F: 610-689-4810 Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Website: www.majortool.com Website: www.konecranes.com Major Tool and Machine provides the nuclear Konecranes Nuclear is a worldwide designer, marketplace with best value, turnkey, engineering, manufacturer and service provider of all nuclear fabrication and machining services. Our lifting equipment, including key safety related extraordinary capability, capacity and experience are equipment such as single failure proof cranes, fuel driven by our commitment to quality assurance. This handling equipment, cask transporters and remotely is evidenced through our ASME N, NPT, N3, NS, U operated equipment. With over 500 worldwide and U2 certifications. In addition, our Nuclear locations we have the resources to support new Quality Assurance Program is audited to the nuclear construction and modifications to existing requirements of NQA-1 and complies with 10CFR21, nuclear facilities worldwide. 10CFR50 part B, 10CFR71 subpart H, 10 CFR72 subpart G and 10CFR830. Longenecker & Associates, Inc. Contact: John R. Longenecker Booth #: 708 Mandall BarrierWorks/ArmorWorks 5052 Pensier St, Las Vegas, NV 89135 Contact: Bill Fore Booth #: 146 P: 702-493-5363 F: 702-543-2382 305 N. 54th St, Chandler, AZ 85226 Email: [email protected] P: 480-598-5700 x1040 F: 480-598-5731 Website: www.longenecker-associates.com Email: [email protected] Website: www.armorworks.com and Longenecker & Associates, Inc. specializes in www.mandall.com addressing management, engineering, energy, environmental and regulatory issues. L&A has a Mandall BarrierWorks, LLC designs and manufactures proven record of helping our clients find and resolve advanced barrier high security door systems, problems before they become significant and costly. incorporating magnetic, multi-pin mechanical locks, Our expertise includes quality assurance support; blast-resistant materials and other high-tech features project management, regulatory compliance; to protect high-value assets. We also design and independent assessments; business development and build portable defensive fighting positions, blast strategic planning. resistant security screens and bullet-proof external lighting fixtures.

109 Marshallton Research Laboratories, Inc. Since 1994, MHF Services has been the nuclear Contact: Dr. A.M. Foster Booth #: 924 industry's leading provider of technical services, PO Box 930, King, NC 27021 packaging, transloading, transportation and P: 336-983-2131 F: 336-983-0096 disposition services. We've pioneered direct rail and Email: [email protected] intermodal transportation to safely and economically Website: www.marshalltonlabs.com ship radioactive materials, sensitive cargo, waste and by-products. MHF is currently supporting several Marshallton produces specialty chemicals for nuclear power plant decommissioning projects across treatment and recycling in the nuclear energy the US. industry. These include cesium extractants BOBCalixC6, MaxCalix, Cs-7SB Modifier and actinide Mid Columbia Engineering Inc. extractant CMPO. For minor actinides we offer Contact: Dan Schwartze Booth #: 623 ammonium bis-(o-trifluoromethyl) dithiophosphinate. 2155 Robertson Dr, Richland, WA 99354 Also available: analytical reagents for Pu, Am, Be. P: 509-943-6706 F: 509-943-0707 Custom synthesis, custom formulation: grams to Email: [email protected] 100's of kilograms. Website: www.mceng.com

Mega-Tech Services, LLC Mid Columbia Engineering, Inc. (MCE) offers Contact: Deanna Bowen Booth #: 1013 engineering, manufacturing and technical services to 11118 Manor View Dr, Mechanicsville, VA 23116 the nuclear, energy, environmental, defense and P: 804-789-1577 F: 804-789-1578 commercial industries. MCE provides technical Email: [email protected] services ranging from engineering and manufacture Website: www.mega-techservices.biz of precision hardware to specialty staffing support. MCE delivers complete in-house design-and-build Mega-Tech Services, LLC provides a complete line of engineering, machining, fabrication, assembly, high pressure hydraulic tools including Guillotine testing and project management for commercial and Cutters, Scissor Cutters, Crushers, Crimpers, Pipe NQA-1 projects. Punches, Sampling, Spreaders and Grapplers. We offer extensive expertise in specialty or custom Mirion Technologies (MGPI), Inc tooling applications for nuclear maintenance and Contact: Audrey Summers Booth #: 327 decommissioning projects. Mega-Tech Services, LLC 5000 Highlands Parkway, Suite 150 is a woman-owned small business providing services Smyrna, GA 30082 to the nuclear industry in both domestic and P: 770-432-2744 F: 770-432-9179 International markets for over 20 years. Email: [email protected] Website: www.mirion.com Metal Solutions Design & Fabrication, LLC Contact: David Berger Booth #: 1033 Mirion Technologies (MGPI), Inc. provides a full range 215 Main St, Dayton, KY 41074 of instrumentation and engineering services for P: 859-282-5000 F:859-282-5003 health physics applications and radiation monitoring Email: [email protected] systems for all nuclear facilities and civil defense Website: www.msdf1.com markets. We are #1 in North America in electronic closimetry. We are more than just a leader in Metal Solutions is a full service fabrication company technology, we are also recognized for our specializing in the design, testing and manufacturing outstanding customer support. of IP-1, IP-2, IP-3 and 7A type A containers. Our staff is familiar with the specific needs of 49 CFR and Mobile Characterization Services, LLC NNSS WAC. We operate under a NQA-1 QA program Contact: Eric Pennala Booth #: 1031 and certify our welders to AWS D1.1 & D1.3. 4110 Ellison St. NE, Suite B Albuquerque, NM 87109 P: 505-321-0579 F: 505-345-3810 Email: [email protected] Website: www.canberra.com

MHF Services – Bronze Sponsor MCS is a joint venture partnership of Canberra Contact: Scott Dempsey Booth #: 900 Industries, Pajarito Scientific Corporation and V.J. 4500 Brooktree Rd, Suite 200 Technologies specializing in mobile characterization Wexford, PA 15090 of TRU and LL Waste using real-time radiography and P: 724-772-9800 F: 866-772-5282 non-destructive assay technologies. MCS is currently Email: [email protected] certified at multiple sites throughout the complex and Website: www.mhfservices.com has characterized over 45,000 containers for shipment to WIPP.

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111 MRI Enterprises, LLC Navarro is a premier contractor for the DOE and the Contact: Xavier J. Saenz or Jon C. Edwards National Nuclear Security Administration providing Booth #: 602 environmental, renewable energy and energy 6500 Boeing Dr, Suite T-3, El Paso, TX 79925 efficiency, nuclear, information technology and P: 915-779-6540 F: 915-779-0108 quality and safety services. Navarro, a woman- Email: [email protected] owned small disadvantaged business, has over 400 Website: www.MRI-company.com employees working in fourteen offices and twenty- three project locations nationwide. The MRI company develops and provides, unique cutting edge products that improve worker safety Netzsch Instruments North America, LLC and environmental sustainability. We serve a broad Contact: J.B. Henderson Booth #: 433 range of markets including both government and PO Box 4469, Estes Park, CO 80517 private organizations. Government organizations P: 970-577-0840 F: 970-577-1224 include US DOE, US DOD, NASA and CDC. Private Email: [email protected] industries include pharmaceutical manufacturing, Website: www.netzsch-nuclear.com research laboratories, thin - film solar cell manufacturing and cancer centers. We qualify as Netzsch Instruments is the leading manufacturer of both a Service - Disabled Veteran Owned Small thermophysical properties/thermal analysis Business (SDVOSB) and as a Minority - Owned instrumentation for the measurement of properties Business Enterprise (MBE). such as thermal conductivity, thermal diffusivity, specific heat, transition energetics, thermal NAC International expansion, mass change, solidus/liquidus Contact: Juan Subiry or Whitney West Booth #: 432 temperatures and evolved gases. Our instruments 3930 E. Jones Bdge Rd, Ste 200 Norcross, GA 30092 can be operated in cold, fume hood, glovebox and P: 770-447-1144 F: 678-328-1501 hot cell environments. Email: [email protected] or [email protected] Website: www.nacintl.com

NAC International (NAC) is an industry-leading provider of engineering and nuclear fuel management solutions for nuclear facility operators, fuel cycle companies and government agencies. The company offers a proven process for the design, licensing and deployment of innovative technologies to store, transport and manage nuclear materials, including high level waste and spent fuel. Our professional staff possesses unsurpassed industry knowledge and Newport News Nuclear News, Inc. – Bronze experience, necessary for today’s demanding Sponsor requirements for nuclear fuel cycle projects and Contact: Shelli Bond Booth #: 537 performance. NAC serves more than 200 customers 4101 Washington Ave, Newport News, VA 23607 and supports a host of diverse projects. P: 757-688-9127 F: 757-380-2671 Email: [email protected] National Museum of Nuclear Science & History Contact: Jim Walther Booth #: 833 NNN’s mission is to be a trusted provider of quality 601 Eubank Blvd, SE, Albuquerque, NM 87123 services by using the recognized expert resources of P: 505-245-2137 x104 F: 505-242-4537 Northrop Grumman Shipbuilding. We will gain and Email: [email protected] maintain a reputation in the industry of being a Website: www.nuclearmuseum.org reliable, sought-after partner for companies bidding on opportunities in the DOE market. The National Museum of Nuclear Science & History is our nation’s Congressionally designated center for public education and for historic preservation of material related to all aspects of the nuclear world.

Navarro Research and Engineering, Inc. Contact: Mary Rhea Booth #: 419 669 Emory Valley Rd, Oak Ridge, TN 37830 P: 865-220-9650 F: 865-220-9651 Email: [email protected] Website: www.navarro-inc.com

112 Nuclear News Contact: Jeff Mosses Booth #: 929 555 N. Kensington Ave, La Grange Park, IL 60526 P: 708-579-8225 F: 708-352-6464 Email: [email protected] Website: www.ans.org/pubs/magazines/rs

Since 1959, Nuclear News magazine has been an North Wind, Inc. – Silver Sponsor integral part of the advertising plans of more than Contact: John Bukowski Booth #: 632 1000 companies who promote their products and 1176 Big Creek Rd, Kellogg, ID 83837 services to the nuclear field. Published by the P: 208-783-1069 American Nuclear Society, monthly news reports Email: [email protected] cover worldwide commercial nuclear power plant Website: www.northwind-inc.com operations, maintenance, security, waste management, fuel and industry. North Wind is a leading small business with core services in waste management, remediation, Nuclear Plant Journal engineering, construction and D&D. Our diverse Contact: Anu Agnihotri Booth #: 733 capabilities allow us to self-perform nearly all aspects 1400 Opus Place, Suite 904 of any given work scope, providing customers with Downers Grove, IL 60515 significant cost savings. North Wind supports a broad P: 630-858-6161 F: 630-858-8787 customer base from twenty offices nationwide. Email: [email protected] Website: www.nuclearplantjournal.com Nuclear Engineering International Contact: Scott Galvin Booth #: 1028 Nuclear Plant Journal, a US publication, provides Progressive House, 2 Maidstone Rd technical information exchange among managers and Sidcup, Kent DA14 5HZ United Kingdom engineers in the industry worldwide. Circulation: P: 44-0-20-8269-7820 F: 44-0-20-8269-7880 12,000, 44 countries, BPA Audited. Published six- Email: [email protected] times per year. Annual Products & Services Directory Website: www.neimagazine.com published in January.

Nuclear Engineering International has been published Nuclear Street - Nuclear Power Portal for more than 55 years. NEI holds a unique position Contact: Cam Abernethy Booth #: 934 within the industry providing independent technical 463 Dinwiddie Ave, Waynesboro, VA 22980 and business analysis for the nuclear power industry. P: 866-966-9640 x2 F: 803-753-0067 With a circulation of over 2,500 and a total Email: [email protected] readership in excess of 10,000, Nuclear Engineering Website: www.nuclearstreet.com International offers its advertisers unrivalled access to the worldwide nuclear marketplace. A digital Nuclear Street (www.NuclearStreet.com) is the version of NEI is now delivered to an additional premier destination for nuclear professionals in the 12,000 readers providing an unprecedented audience global nuclear power industry. Nuclear Street offers who are able to interact directly with your advertising industry news, job listings, buyers guide, columns, through live links. book reviews, plant maps, photos, research assets, forums, videos, perspectives, databases, documents, Nuclear Filter Technology search tools and more. Contact: Crystal Dunkle Booth #: 142 741 Corporate Circle, Suite R NUCON International, Inc. Golden, CO 80401 Contact: Robert Sommer Booth #: 710 P: 303-987-2020 x255 PO Box 29151, 7000 Huntley Rd Email: [email protected] Columbus, OH 43229 P: 614-846-5710 F: 614-431-0858 Email: [email protected] Website: www.nucon-int.com

NUCON specializes in high efficiency filtration process equipment. Activated carbon and specialty adsorbents for the control of radioiodine, mercury, sulfur, noble and acid gases. Testing of HVAC and filtration systems. Manufacture instruments for testing HVAC systems. Engineering, design, fabrication and testing of systems using adsorption technology including gaseous radwaste control.

113 Nukeworker.com analysis, PCB Congeners, drinking water analysis, Contact: Michael Rennhack Booth #: 505 NPDES wastewater analysis, low-level Mercury 5379 Meadow Lane, Coloma, MI 49038 analysis, radiochemistry analysis and more. Pace P: 269-238-0203 F: 865-238-0006 Analytical operates a nationwide network of Email: [email protected] laboratories, service centers and satellite operations Website: www.NukeWorker.com — providing project support for thousands of industry, consulting, engineering, manufacturing and NukeWorker delivers more nuclear job seekers than government professionals. any other career site, with the only database of nuclear resumes. NukeWorker ranks #1 in search PacTec, Inc. engines for 'nuclear jobs' and is the most visited Contact: Jason Durham Booth #: 720 nuclear site on the Internet, with more than 6.5 PO Box 8069, 12365 Haynes St million page views each month. Clinton, LA 70722 P: 800-272-2832 F: 225-683-8711 Off-Site Recovery Project at LANL Email: [email protected] Contact: Kathleen Trujillo Booth #: 536 Website: www.pactecinc.com PO Box 1663, MS E521, Los Alamos, NM 87545 P: 505-667-6394 F: 505-665-1235 PacTec™ is the industry leader in engineering and Email: [email protected] manufacturing of packaging for the hazardous, Website: www.osrp.lanl.gov nuclear and radioactive waste transportation industry. Our commitment to industry needs keeps The Off-Site Source Recovery Project (OSRP) is part us on the forefront of product development - of the National Nuclear Security Administration's consistently earning us patents and resulting in (NNSA) Office of Global Threat Reduction (NA-21) continuously improved products for our deserving and is managed at Los Alamos National Laboratory customers. through the Nuclear Nonproliferation Division. OSRP has an NNSA sponsored mission to remove excess, Pajarito Scientific Corporation unwanted, abandoned, or orphan radioactive sealed Contact: Al Cobb Booth #: 538 sources from the environment that pose a potential 2532 Camino Entrada, Santa Fe, NM 82507 risk to health, safety and national security. P: 505-424-6660 x103 F: 505-424-1109 Email: [email protected] ORTEC Website: www.pajaritoscientific.com Contact: Susie Brockman Booth #: 617 801 S. Illinois Ave, Oak Ridge, TN 37831 Pajarito Scientific Corporation (PSC), is an American- P: 865-483-2124 F: 865-425-1380 Owned Small business providing domestic Email: [email protected] safeguards, commercial and government nuclear Website: www.ortec-online.com remediation, re-processing, criticality safety systems. PSC's range of instruments, plant-integrated systems ORTEC manufactures a wide range of radiation and measurement services provides safe & cost- measurement instruments and systems for use in effective solutions for nuclear materials assay, waste management operations associated with plant characterization and operations needs. PSC now operation, decommissioning and waste disposal. Visit provides security cleared personnel through Pajarito the ORTEC booth to learn about these and the new Scientific Security Corporation. AURAS 3000 free release waste assay box counter for handling bulk quantities of decommissioning waste.

Pace Analytical Services, Inc. Contact: Rich Hixson Booth #: 832 1638 Roseytown Rd, Suite 2, 3 & 4 Greensburg, PA 15650 P: 724-850-5600 F: 724-850-5601 Email: [email protected] Website: www.pacelabs.com

Pace Analytical Services, Inc. is a privately held, full- service sampling and analytical testing firm, providing analytical environmental testing and field sampling services, method development and validation and onsite laboratory operations and management services. Pace also provides specialty analytical testing services including air toxics, soil vapor intrusion, bioassay, biota analysis, dioxin/furan

114 Pentek, Inc. Contact: Linda A. Lukart Booth #: 401 1026 Fourth Ave, Coraopolis, PA 15108 P: 412-262-0725 F: 412-262-0731 Email: [email protected] Website: www.pentekusa.com PaR Systems, Inc. – Gold Sponsor WM2011 marks Pentek’s 30th year of service to the Contact: Karen Knoblock Booth #: 732 nuclear D&D industry. From early roots established 707 County Road E, West, Shoreview, MN 55126- during Three Mile Island Unit 2 accident recovery 7007 activities, Pentek is now a global supplier of P: 651-484-7261 F: 651-483-2689 engineering services and specialized equipment to Email: [email protected] support facility remediation and waste management, Website: www.par.com including decontamination of structural steel, concrete, wood and synthetic materials. VAC-PAC ®, Since 1961, PaR Systems has provided advanced MOOSE® and WallWalker® are Pentek’s flagship engineered equipment, systems and services, products. specializing in remote handling and manipulator systems for process cell and decommissioning Perkins Specialized Transportation Contracting applications in the nuclear industry. PaR provides Contact: Ray Morgan Booth #: 539 systems for size reduction and hazardous material 1800 Riverview Dr, Northfield, MN 55057 handling environments, including telerobotic P: 507-301-0704 F: 507-301-0705 manipulators, powered manipulators, robotic systems Email: [email protected] and transporters and in-cell cranes. Website: www. www.heavyhaul.com Paragon D&E Perkins Specialized Transportation Contracting is an Contact: Bob Starck Booth #: 132 asset based transportation company headquartered 5225 33rd St, SE, Grand Rapids, MI 49512 in Northfield, Minnesota, USA whose singular focus is P: 616-949-2220 F: 616-949-2536 on handling extreme dimension and or weight Email: [email protected] resulting in super heavy long distance highway Website: www.paragonde.com moves and or moves that require specific finite management and oversight. We own over 4,000 Paragon D&E specializes in taking product custom engineered configurations of modular dual development from concept to design to production. lane loading hydraulic transporters manufactured by Paragon is NQA-1 approved and is skilled in working Goldhofer, Trail King, Aspen and Talbert that are with certification of materials. Paragon handles all designed for long distance highway loads (the largest phases from specialized machining, rapid prototyping fleet of this equipment in North America). We have to testing and production with expertise in large significant experience in moving cargo in nuclear and parts. Paragon also produces very detailed, as well as conventional power, aerospace, defense, petroleum extremely large composite tooling and parts. refining and oil and gas, alternative fuels and other industries that require extensive engineering, project Parsons management and unique equipment to support their Contact: Mary Elsayeh Buxton Booth #: 514 most difficult long-distance highway moves. 100 W. Walnut St, Pasadena, CA 91124 P: 626-440-3738 F: 626-440-2110 Perma-Fix Environmental Services, Inc. Email: [email protected] Contact: Wendy Witsoe Booth #: 309 Website: www.parsons.com 575 Oak Ridge Tpke, Suite 200 Oak Ridge, TN 37830 Founded in 1944, Parsons, an engineering and P: 865-813-1329 F: 865-813-1301 construction firm with revenues of $2.9 billion in Email: [email protected] 2009, is 100% owned by the Employee Stock Website: www.perma-fix.com Ownership Trust. We conquer the toughest logistical challenges and deliver landmark design-build projects Perma-Fix Environmental Services, Inc. is a to private industrial customers worldwide as well as professional waste management company federal, regional and local government agencies. specializing in the management of hazardous, low- Parsons is a leader in many diversified markets such level radioactive and mixed wastes both on client as communications, education, energy, sites and at our treatment facilities. We offer the environmental, facilities, federal government, most comprehensive waste management services in healthcare, infrastructure, life sciences, the US. transportation, vehicle inspection and water/wastewater.

115 116 Petersen, Inc. Premier Technology, Inc. Contact: Rob Despain Booth #: 215 Contact: Lyle Freeman Booth #: 325 1527 N. 2000 W, Ogden, UT 84404 1858 W. Bridge St, Blackfoot, ID 83221 P: 801-732-2027 F: 801-732-2098 P: 208-785-2274 F: 208-782-9001 Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Website: www.peterseninc.com Website: www.ptius.net

Petersen, Inc. is an employee owned business Premier is a progressive manufacturing company currently providing the DOE industry with the focused on the integration of technology and science Standard Waste Box, Ten-Drum Over Pack, IP1, IP2's with professional craftsmanship. We perform and other NQA-1 quality transportation and storage construction management, custom engineering, containers. We are the fabricator of the Bechtel HLW design, fabrication, testing and installation for the and LAW Melters at the River Protection Project in nuclear, US DOD, US DOE, aeronautical, food and Hanford, Washington. chemical processing industries. We are known for our ability to supply the highest quality turnkey PIERCAN, Inc engineering, custom fabrication, system integration Contact: Lynn Aurelius Booth #: 602 and field installation solutions to those industries. 180 Bosstick Blvd, San Marcos, CA 92069 Examples of custom fabricated items are: vessels, P: 928-277-7080 F: 928-717-1842 heat exchangers, exhausters, gloveboxes, hot cells, Email: [email protected] stairs, railing, platforms, conveyors, conveyance Website: www.piercan.com systems, structural steel items, skid technology, etc.

PIERCAN, Inc. is "Your Worldwide Technical Source Project Services Group, LLC (PSG) for Glovebox Gloves." PIERCAN is the world leader in Contact: Lauren Amos Booth #: 504 the development and production of glove breach 780 Buford Hwy, Suite 202A, Suwanee, GA 30024 mitigation solutions for high security containment. P: 866-214-2519 F: 866-736-3475 PIERCAN is committed to supplying the highest Email: [email protected] quality and competitively priced drybox/isolator Website: www.psginfo.com gloves worldwide. PSG, an 8(a) SDB, provides traditional consulting and Plant Decommissioning staff augmentation services, from quick turn-around Contact: Steve Larson Booth #: 706 tasks to long-term projects. Our services include 266 Park Ave, Lake Villa, IL 60046 construction management, program and project P: 847-265-8800 F: 847-265-6556 management, cost engineering/estimating, planning/ Email: [email protected] scheduling, as well as highly specialized services such Website: www.plantdecommissioning.com as D&D, engineering, outage management, customized maintenance services and business PlantDecommissioning.com designs and process. manufactures cutting equipment for removal and size reduction of large irradiated components. Our engineering and manufacturing groups have extensive nuclear portfolios. Located near Zion Nuclear Station, our facility provides turnkey engineering, manufacturing, testing and mock-up training for our equipment.

Porvair Filtration Group Ltd. - Microfiltrex Division Contact: Chris Chadwick Booth #: 534 1 Concorde Close, Segensworth Fareham, Hampshire PO15 5RT United Kingdom P: 44-0-1489-864330 F: 44-0-1489-864399 Email: [email protected] Website: www.porvairfiltration.com

Microfiltrex is the complete solution provider for filtration in the nuclear industry. Including power generation, fuel conversion off-gas clean-up, reactor containment venUSRV protection, waste packaging and a WIPP compliant filter breather, highly active liquid, remotely handled filter systems and spent fuel drying, we have supplied tried and trusted solutions.

117 Quality Inspection Services, Inc. RJR Engineering, P.C. Contact: Martin Derby Booth #: 501 Contact: Ted Towsley Booth #: 511 37 Franklin St, Suite 400, Buffalo, NY 14202 23 Mechanic St, Springville, NY 14141 P: 716-853-2611 F: 716-853-2619 P: 716-592-3980 F: 716-592-4216 Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Website: www.qisi.com, www.applusrtd.com Website: www.rjrpc.com

Quality Inspection Services, Inc. (QISI and an Applus RJR Engineering, P.C. provides mechanical, RTD Company) utilizes ASME NQA-l quality assurance structural, electrical, civil/environmental, chemical program. QISI has been audited and accepted and fire protection engineering as well as remote throughout the nuclear industry to provide tooling design, pressure vessel design, finite element Nondestructive Examinations, Civil Material Testing analysis, hoisting and rigging, project management and Geotechnical Environmental Investigations. and scheduling. RJR specializes in nuclear QISI's Quality Assurance and Quality Control Services decontamination/decommissioning and operates include Vendor Surveillances, Receipt Inspection, under a fully implemented ASME NQA-1 2008 Auditing and Programmatic Development. program.

Radwaste Solutions RMD Instruments Corporation Contact: Jeff Mosses Booth #: 927 Contact: Peter Waer Booth #: 165 555 N. Kensington Ave, La Grange Park, IL 60526 44 Hunt St, Watertown, MA 02472 P: 708-579-8225 F: 708-352-6464 P: 617-668-6900 F: 617-928-9980 Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Website: www.ans.org/pubs/magazines/rs Website: www.rmdinc.com

Radwaste Solutions is a specialty magazine for waste RMD Instruments Corp. (and related company RMD, management professionals. Articles discuss practical Inc.) performs research in and designs, approaches and solutions to everyday problems and manufactures, sells and services instruments that issues in all fields of radioactive waste management incorporate nuclear techniques. RMD RadCam and environmental restoration. Included is coverage system makes visual images of gamma-emitting of the generation, handling, removal, treatment, isotopes. RMD RadCam is spectroscopic. Locate, cleanup and disposal of radioactive (including mixed) identify and monitor unknown sources of gamma waste. A complimentary January-April “double-issue” radiation. was included in your WM2011 registration packet! Robatel Technologies LLC Reef Industries, Inc. Contact: Teo Grochowski Booth #: 611 Contact: Tom Scarborough Booth #: 422 PO Box 12007, Roanoke, VA 24022 9209 Almeda Genoa Rd, Houston, TX 77075 P: 540-989-2878 P: 713-507-4270 F: 713-507-4271 Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Website: www.robateltech.com Website: www.reefindustries.com Robatel Technologies is a design engineering and Griffolyn® flexible laminates are excellent for storing specialty fabrication small business. As part of the or protecting equipment or isolating and containing Robatel Group, we have access to 60 years of nuclear contaminated materials. These durable covers and industry experience. We specialize in waste containers are engineered to be highly resistant to process/treatment systems; modular hot cells; tears and punctures and offer an exceptional outdoor gloveboxes; and radioactive material transport service life. All Griffolyn® products are designed and and/or storage casks. fabricated to your specific requirements. Rolls-Royce Remotec/Northrop Grumman Contact: Debbie Hampton Booth #: 122 Contact: Wes Comer Booth# :738 994-A Explorer Blvd, Huntsville, AL 35806 353 JD Yarnell Parkway, Clinton, TN 37716 P: 423-756-9730 F: 256-922-1540 P: 865-269-1139 Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Website: www.rolls-royce/nuclear

Rolls-Royce provides the highest quality nuclear support services spanning the reactor lifecycle. Our focus is on providing customers with integrated long- term support services covering safety, licensing and environmental activities; component design, manufacture and supply; in-service support, plant life extension and ageing management.

118 Business as usual is now business that’s better than ever.

NQA-1/10CFR50 Appendix B/ASME Section III and VIII

ODIM Numet’s wealth of experience in the nuclear energy 50-year nuclear track record. With our important ASME and hazardous waste management industries is now a part N-stamp accredited facility, we can now gain even of the Rolls-Royce family. Our expertise in all facets of new greater expertise in the core areas of component build, inspection, maintenance, refurbishment, waste manufacturing and in-service support. For us and our handling, process equipment and remote handling systems customers, business as usual is now business that’s will grow in partnership with a company that has a proven better than ever. Trusted to deliver excellence R.W. Wiesener, Inc. S.A. Technology Contact: Bob Wiesener Booth #: 507 Contact: Chance Phillips Booth #: 502 112-D Charter St, Albemarle, NC 28001 3985 S. Lincoln Ave, Loveland, CO 80537 P: 704-982-9242 P: 970-663-1431 F: 970-663-5898 Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Website: www.telemanipulators.com Website: www.satechnology.com

Tru-Motion Products (a division of R.W. Wiesener Inc) S.A.Technology is a precision engineering company is the leading manufacturer of Telemanipulators for that specializes in advanced robotics and technology PET hot cells. Specifically designed for compact services. Since S.A.Technology was founded in 1992, enclosures, our mechanical Telemanipulators are we have served the nuclear, defense, aerospace, economical, very easy to operate and nearly energy and environment markets. With our advanced maintenance free. We can size the arm segments to robotics and technology services, we make work provide the required handling coverage inside your easier, safer and more cost-effective. custom enclosure. Our Telemanipulators are also available through all leading hot cell manufacturers. An optional load hook is available and has a rated handling capacity of 18 pounds. Custom booting is also available for class 100 enclosures. Ask us about our superior warranty and customer service!

Safety & Ecology Corporation – Bronze Sponsor Contact: Donald Goebel Booth #: 205 SEC Business Centery 2800 Solway Rd, Knoxville, TN 37931 P: 800-905-0501 F: 865-539-9868 Email: [email protected] Website: www.sec-tn.com

SEC provides a wide range of environmental services worldwide including rad/haz remediation; facility D&D; RADCON; and emergency response. We specialize in the removal and remediation of hazardous materials for DOE, DoD, other federal agencies and also the private industry. SEC also has one of the largest rad/IH instrumentation labs in country.

SA Mays, LLC Contact: Sarah Alkire Mays Booth #: 1025 22 E Gay St, Suite 301, Columbus, OH 43215 P: 614-225-8877 F: 614-225-8878 Email: [email protected] Savannah River Nuclear Solutions, LLC – Gold Website: www.samaysllc.com Sponsor Contact: Dawn Haygood Booth #: 819 SA Mays, LLC is a small, woman-owned, Ohio Savannah River Site, Bldg 730-1B, Rm 3135 company specializing in providing Project Aiken, SC 29808 Management and Waste Management support to P: 803-952-7395 F: 803-952-9329 environmental projects. We bring seasoned Email: [email protected] management, scientists, field personnel and an array Website: www.savannahrivernuclearsolutions.com of technologies to assist our clients in meeting their milestones with a focus on integrity, innovation and Savannah River Nuclear Solutions, LLC (SRNS) is the resolve. management and operating contractor at the US DOE's Savannah River Site. A Fluor-Daniel Partnership comprised of Fluor, Northrop Grumman and Honeywell, SRNS serves the nation through safe, secure, cost-effective management of our nuclear weapons stockpile, nuclear materials and the environment.

120 Savannah River Nuclear Solutions A Fluor Daniel partnership with Northrop Grumman and Honeywell

Nuclear materials. Powerful assets.

But as the use of nuclear materials increases, so does the challenge of managing the resulting waste.

Savannah River Nuclear Solutions pairs the vast experience of our workforce with the proven facilities of the Savannah River Site to provide the nation with innovative technologies and tangible results in the field of waste management. Savannah River Nuclear Solutions. Committed to waste management progress. Committed to the future. Science Applications International Corporation SM&A (SAIC) Contact: Cheryl Eisenhauer Booth #: 333 Contact: Charlotte O'Neil Booth #: 223 4695 MacArthur Ct, 8th Floor PO Box 2501, Oak Ridge, TN 37831 Newport Beach, CA 92660 P: 865-481-4724 F: 865-483-1198 P: 949-975-1550 F: 949-975-1624 Email: charlotte.c.o'[email protected] Email: [email protected] Website: www.saic.com Website: www.smawins.com

SAIC is a FORTUNE 500® scientific, engineering and SM&A is a leading management consulting firm technology applications company that uses its deep providing leadership and mentoring solutions to domain knowledge to solve problems of vital position clients to PURSUE the right business importance to the nation and the world, in national opportunities, WIN new business and PERFORM security, energy and the environment, critical complex projects and programs. Proven processes, infrastructure and health. For more information, visit people and tools deliver significant growth across www.saic.com. SAIC: From Science to Solutions®. markets, products and services. SM&A has the depth and domain experience to provide complete program lifecycle consulting solutions in diverse markets, from aerospace and defense contractors, through major systems integrators, to healthcare and financial/audit service providers. Experienced SM&A consultants tailor solutions to help clients succeed, making SM&A the partner companies turn to when they must PURSUE, WIN and PERFORM.

S.M. Stoller Corporation, The Contact: Mark Fertitta Booth #: 515 Shaw Group, The – Silver Sponsor 105 Technology Dr, Suite 190 Contact: Sara Pitz Booth #: 614 Broomfield, CO 80021 7604 Technology Way, Suite 300 P: 303-546-4331 F: 303-443-1408 Denver, CO 80237 Email: [email protected] P: 720-235-2546 F: 720-554-8295 Website: www.stoller.com Email: [email protected] Website: www.shawgrp.com The S.M. Stoller Corporation was established in 1959 to provide nuclear engineering consulting services. Shaw performs engineering, design, construction, Today, Stoller is a company of nearly 1,000 program management and maintenance services for employees providing services including site multiple industries, including nuclear. As a major characterization, design, remediation, facility service provider to the federal government, Shaw management, water and air sampling, information assists with the development of effective solutions for management, waste management, D&D, analytical the safe handling, treatment, transportation and quality assurance and control and risk assessment. disposal of radioactive and mixed wastes. And through advanced nuclear technology, we provide engineering and construction services for nuclear projects worldwide.

Siempelkamp Nuclear Technology, Inc. Contact: Steven Garner Booth #: 113 3229 Sunset Blvd, West Columbia, SC 29169 P: 803-796-2727 F: 803-939-1083 Spectra Tech, Inc. – Bronze Sponsor Email: [email protected] Contact: Sharon Bogaty Booth #: 506 Website: www.siempelkamp-sns.com 132 Jefferson Ct, Oak Ridge, TN 37830 P: 865-813-2158 F: 865-335-9833 Siempelkamp Nuclear Technology, Inc.’s core Email: [email protected] business comprises Project Management, Engineering Website: www.spectratechinc.com and Planning, Components and Systems Solutions for equipment and retro-fitting as well as Spectra Tech, Inc. is an engineering, environmental Decontamination and Decommissioning (D&D), and nuclear services company that focuses on Modernization/Modification of Components and providing high quality and cost-effective technical Systems of Nuclear Facilities, Stud Tensioning solutions for our Federal Government and commercial Devices, Containers, Recycling, Manufacture, clients worldwide. We are located in Oak Ridge, Calculations and Analyses as well as service. Tennessee (main office), Colorado Springs, Colorado and Huntsville, Alabama.

122 ENVIRONMENTALLY RESPONSIBLE WASTE MANAGEMENT SOLUTIONS

From characterization and remediation to storage, transport, and disposal, Shaw assists commercial and federal clients with solutions for cost-effective, environmentally responsible radioactive and mixed-waste management.

PROGRAM/CONSTRUCTION MANAGEMENT ENGINEERING, DESIGN & CONSTRUCTION ENVIRONMENTAL REMEDIATION & RESTORATION ENERGY MISSION SUPPORT SERVICES EMERGENCY RESPONSE & RECOVERY

ENVIRONMENTAL & INFRASTRUCTURE • POWER ENERGY & CHEMICALS • FABRICATION & MANUFACTURING www.shawgrp.com

18M112010D Sperian Protection Clothing/Honeywell Strategic Packaging Systems, LLC (SPS), is a full- Contact: Gary Zimmermann Booth #: 932 service manufacturer and distributor of packaging 4200 St. Laurent, 6th Fl, Montreal, materials, packaging systems and railcar liner Quebec H2W 2R2 Canada systems. With over 80 years of combined craft P: 514-236-5036 knowledge and experience, we pioneered the first Email: [email protected] “soft-sided” packaging and railcar liner products used Website: www.spectratechinc.com in radioactive waste industry back in the 90’s. Located in Madisonville, TN our 45,000 square foot SSM Industries, Inc./NewYork Blower manufacturing facility employs skilled local labor and Contact: Mark Saucier Booth #: 535 offers state of the art sewing, heat sealing and 3401 Grand Ave, Pittsburgh, PA 15225 binding equipment. P: 412-777-5101 F: 412-771-5382 Email: [email protected] Studsvik, Inc. Website: www.SSMI.biz Contact: Rosita Colson Booth #: 130 5605 Glenridge Dr, Suite 705, Atlanta, GA 30342 SSM (formerly Schneider Sheet Metal) is the largest P: 404-381-8593 Safety Related HVAC designer/fabricator/supplier/ Email: [email protected] installer in the US. We have over 40 years experience Website: www.studsvik.com providing our DOE and nuclear industry customers with qualified, custom products specific to their air Founded in 1947, Studsvik is a leading supplier of handling needs and in accordance with ASME AG-1 & specialty services to the international nuclear NQA-1. industry and has a proven history of innovation, efficiency and safety. With a corporate commitment STÄUBLI Corporation to environmental responsibility and sustainability, the Contact: Chris Eason Booth #: 601 company provides technologically advanced services 201 Parkway W, Duncan, SC 29651 in four main areas: waste treatment, P: 864-486-5472 F: 864-486-5495 decommissioning, engineering and operating Email: [email protected] efficiency. Website: www.staubli.com Sullivan International Group, Inc. STÄUBLI offers the most advanced range of fluid and Contact: Kevin Hayford Booth #: 439 electrical REMOTE quick couplings available. 2750 Womble Rd, San Diego, CA 92106 Designed for rapid remote operator connection, our P: 619-260-1432 standard range can be engineered to your unique Email: [email protected] requirements. Keyed locking eliminates cross connection and prevents accidental disconnection. synrocANSTO® Contact: Athena Tzigeras Booth #: 324 Strata - G, LLC Locked Bag 2001 Contact: Jenny Freeman or Dan Hurst Booth #: 121 Kirrawee, DC NSW 2232 Australia 2027 Castaic Lane, Knoxville, TN 37932 P: 61-2-9717-7748 F: 61-2 9717 9225 P: 865-934-3400 F: 865-934-3439 Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] or [email protected] Website: www.synrocansto.com Website: www.stratag.org synrocANSTO®’s vision is to make a safer Strata-G is a Veteran-owned Small Business that environment for future generations by providing provides technical services in the areas of energy, solutions for the treatment of radioactive wastes.” environment and sustainability. Specifically, our synrocANSTO®’s tailored waste form designs and services include Business and Information associated process technologies: maximize waste Management, Science, Engineering, Waste loadings, enhance chemical durability and increase Management and Transportation, Technology processing flexibility–offering cleanup cost and Deployment. With 100 scientists and engineers on schedule savings worth billions of dollars. staff, we work at project sites throughout the country.

Strategic Packaging Systems, LLC Contact: Tim Blythe Booth #: 825 276 Warren St, PO Box 295, Madisonville, TN 37354 P: 423-545-9505 F: 423-545-9525 Email: [email protected] Website: www.spsonline.biz

124 TC Program Solutions, LLC Tetra Tech – Bronze Sponsor Contact: Steve Crowe Booth #: 822 Contact: Margie Vasquez Booth #: 622 130 Mitchell Rd, Oak Ridge, TN 37830 3475 E. Foothill Blvd, Pasadena, CA 91107 P: 865-548-4233 F: 865-241-4601 P: 626-470-2330 F: 626-470-2130 Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] or Website: www.tcpsllc.com [email protected] Website: www.tetratech.com TC Program Solutions (TCPS), LLC is a veteran- owned small business with offices in Oak Ridge, TN. Tetra Tech has provided planning, design, TCPS is a provider of specialty engineering services construction and operations support to DOE/NNSA for to customers in government and commercial more than 30 years. We share DOE’s unwavering regulated industries.. TCPS serves a specific niche commitment to the safety and protection of our within the marketplace; to provide professional workers, our nation and the environment. Tetra services within the following disciplines: Start up Tech’s work includes successful ISM on high-risk Support, Operational Readiness Review, CONOPS, projects for technically complex programs and Assessments, QA Support, Nuclear Safety & facilities at virtually every major site in the Criticality Safety, Licensing and Nuclear Technical DOE/NNSA complex. Our diverse cross-program Support. experience allows us to achieve efficiencies and synergy in our processes, which benefit our Teledyne Brown Engineering, Inc. DOE/NNSA clients through safe, innovative and cost- Contact: Jessica Sanders Booth #: 633 effective solutions to the Department’s most 300 Sparkman Dr, Huntsville, AL 35805 imposing challenges. P: 256-726-1385 F: 256-726-2606 Email: [email protected] THOR Treatment Technologies Website: www.teledynenuclear.com Contact: Edgardo Berrios Booth #: 1030 723 The Parkway, Richland, WA 99352 Teledyne Brown Engineering, Inc. is a recognized P: 509-392-9670 F: 509-943-6991 leader in providing innovative and proven systems Email: [email protected] engineering, advanced technology application, Website: www.thortt.com software development and manufacturing solutions to DOE, commercial nuclear, environmental and THOR Treatment Technologies offers a patented, military requirements. Our strengths in both non-incineration, steam reforming process to convert engineering and manufacturing distinguish us from a variety of problematic radioactive hazardous wastes our competitors. to a form that can be disposed of safely and cost- effectively. TestAmerica Laboratories, Inc. Contact: Steven LaZar Booth #: 500 Tidewater, Inc. PO Box 1716, Elizabeth, CO 80107 Contact: Mike Davidson, CHP, CHMM Booth #: 723 P: 303-646-1280 F: 303-646-1281 7161 Columbia Gateway Dr, Suite C Email: [email protected] Columbia, MD 21046 Website: www.testamericainc.com P: 410-997-4458 F: 410-997-8713 Email: [email protected] TestAmerica is the leading environmental testing firm Website: www.tideh2o.net in the United States, including 36 laboratories and 33 service centers. TestAmerica provides innovative Tidewater supports fuel cycle and allied radioactive technical expertise and comprehensive analytical materials customers - including nuclear energy, testing services. TestAmerica currently employs defense, environmental remediation and waste nearly 2,800 professionals dedicated to exceptional disposition. Tidewater's environmental technology service and solutions for our clients’ environmental capabilities complement its technical radiological testing needs. expertise - including reciprocal radioactive materials licensing for decommissioning activities nationwide. Tidewater is an SBA-certified 8(a) company employing over 120 professionals, based in Columbia, Maryland.

125 TLI Freight Services, LLC air, or water; and disposal of the commodity. Traffic Contact: Warren Baugh Booth #: Semi D management services including expediting services to 8161 Maple Lawn Blvd Suite 450, Fulton, MD 20759 ensure a smooth flow of product/equipment. P: 301-421-4324 Email: [email protected] TW Metals - Nuclear Material Solutions Website: www.tlifreightservices.com Contact: Franz Schmidt Booth #: 930 880 Brickworks Dr, Leetsdale, PA 15056 TLI Freight Services, the domestic trucking arm of P: 724-251-4700 F: 724-251-4701 Transport Logistics International, offers integrated Email: [email protected] transportation solutions for the nuclear fuel cycle. Website: www.twmetals.com With highly skilled and specially-trained drivers, TLI Freight Services is an integral component in TLI’s TW Metals – Nuclear Materials Solutions is the ASME world-wide transportation network, supported by Certified source for all classes, forms and grades of majority shareholders Nuclear Cargo + Services and fabrication material – plate, bar, forgings, tubing, the Daher Group. fittings, consumables and fasteners including Special Chemistry Products. Serving the domestic and Toxco Materials Management Center international commercial markets, utility, research, Contact: Rick Low Booth #: 637 DOE and DOD. QA programs in accordance with; 109 Flint Rd, Oak Ridge, TN 37830 10CFR21,10CFR50 b, 10CFR71 h, 10CFR72 g, NQA-1, P: 865-482-5532 F: 865-482-5605 NCA 3800 and ASME Sect. III. Email: [email protected] Website: www.toxcommc.com UltraTech International, Inc. Contact: Matt Shaw Booth #: 523 Toxco is a premier recycling, reuse and disposal 11542 Davis Creek Ct, Jacksonville, FL 32256 facility for radiologically contaminated materials. P: 904-292-1611 F: 904-292-1325 Toxco’s recycling concept for materials and Email: [email protected] equipment previously used in a radioactive Website: www.spillcontainment.com environment is to identify and separate contaminated materials from non-contaminated materials. Our UltraTech provides innovative product and technology focus is on the reuse of non-contaminated and solutions ranging from vents and filters, packaging, contaminated materials. storage, absorbents, bag-out bags, Type A packaging, containers, secondary containment and Tri-State Motor Transit Company customized products to meet specific site needs. Contact: Charlie Pittman Booth #: 156 Recent developments to be highlighted will include 8141 East 7th St, PO Box 113, Joplin, MO 64802 macroencapsulation technology and a new line of gas P: 800-234-8768 F: 417-621-2022 sampling filter vents. Email: [email protected] Website: www.tsmtco.com Underwater Construction Corporation Contact: Philip McDermott Booth #: 518 Tri-State Motor Tansit has long been a leader in the 110 Plains Rd, Essex, CT O6246 transportation industry. The company's strategy is to P: 800-USA-DIVE F: 860-767-0612 offer high quality, specialized transportation services Email: [email protected] in specific market niches. TSMT specializes in Website: www.uccdive.com transporting cargo that requires careful handling. Exceptional performance in safety and customer Underwater Construction Corporation (UCC) is the service continues to be a hallmark of the company. leading provider of underwater services to commercial and government facilities. For over 40 Turnkey Transportation years, UCC has delivered unparalleled support to the Contact: Todd Bates Booth #: 508 nuclear power generation industry. With our global 663 Emory Valley Rd, Oak Ridge, TN 37830 response capabilities, our 200+ member dive team P: 865-425-0671 F: 865-425-0673 delivers a myriad of underwater services to a diverse Email: [email protected] nuclear customer base. Website: www.tsllc.org

We are transportation and waste management specialists for shipping campaigns that require staff augmentation or “turnkey” transportation services to handle the disposition of hazardous, low level and mixed waste material shipments. Characterization activities; waste profiling; determination of hazard class; identification of packaging requirements; field operations; transportation services via highway, rail,

126 UniTech Services Group, Inc. Website: www.em.doe.gov Contact: Gregg Johnstone Booth #: 604 The Office of Environmental Management’s mission is 295 Parker St, PO Box 51957, Springfield, MA O1151 to complete the cleanup of radioactive wastes, spent P: 413-543-6911 F: 413-543-6989 nuclear fuel, excess plutonium and uranium and Email: [email protected] contaminated soil and groundwater created from the Website: www.unitechus.com legacy of nuclear weapons production and government-sponsored nuclear energy research in UniTech Services Group, Inc. is the world's largest the US during the Cold War in a safe, secure and supplier of nuclear protective clothing and compliant manner. accessories. Our nuclear licensed decontamination facilities throughout the US and Europe provide the US DOE Office of Legacy Management following services: radiological laundering of Contact: Tony Carter Booth #: 716 protective clothing, decontamination and testing of 1000 Independence Ave, SW respirators and the decontamination of tools & Washington, DC 20585 equipment (scaffolding, hand tools, portable HEPA P: 202-586-3323 F: 202-586-8403 vacuums, etc.). Our products and services are Email: [email protected] designed to provide our customers cost-effective Website: www.lm.doe.gov protection of their workers with minimal generation of radioactive waste. The US DOE Office of Legacy Management (LM) was established in 2003 to provide a long-term, sustainable solution to the legacy of the Cold War. LM is responsible for long-term surveillance and maintenance of environmental remedies, promotion of beneficial reuse and management of records and information for former weapons production sites URS – Gold Sponsor across the nation. Contact: Bill Whiting Booth #: 1001 106 Newberry Street, Aiken, SC 29801 US DOE NV Site Office Environmental P: 803-502-9963 F: 803-502-5702 Management Email: [email protected] Contact: Dona Merritt Booth #: 220 Website: www.urscorp.com PO Box 98952, MS 505 AMEM, Las Vegas, NV 89193 P: 702-295-3082 F: 702-295-5300 URS Corporation is a fully integrated engineering, Email: [email protected] construction and technical services organization with Website: www.nv.doe.gov the capabilities to support the project life cycle -- from inception through start-up and operation to The US DOE, National Nuclear Security closure. URS has approximately 43,000 employees in Administration Nevada Site Office Environmental a network of offices across the US and in more than Management Program is responsible for addressing 30 countries. contamination from historic nuclear testing in Nevada, disposing low-level and mixed low-level URS Engineered Products Division radioactive waste from approved generators and Contact: Ryan Williamson Booth #: 835 conducting environmental protection and compliance 5301 Sierra Vista Dr, Carlsbad, NM 88220 activities at the Nevada National Security Site. P: 575-234-5740 F: 575-885-7622 Email: [email protected] US DOE Office of Technology & Development Website: www.wepd.com Contact: Kurt Gerdes Booth #: 111 1000 Independence Ave, SW URS Engineered Products Division (EPD) is one of the Washington, DC 20585 best equipped facilities for fabrication and machining P: 301-903-7289 F: 301-903-8244 in the Southwest. EPD has a unique combination of Email: [email protected] highly skilled staff, an extensive nuclear quality Website: www.em.doe.gov assurance program and the capability to handle a wide variety of cutting, forming, finishing and testing The Department of Energy’s (DOE’s) Office of operations. Environmental Management (EM) is responsible for cleaning up the environmental legacy of nuclear US DOE Office of Environmental Management weapons research and production from the Cold War. Contact: Kay Rash Booth #: 636 The DOE-EM Office of Technology Innovation and 1000 Independence Ave, SW Development transforms science and innovation into Washington, DC 20585 practical solutions to fulfill the EM mission. P: 202-586-5420 F: 202-586-2974 Email: [email protected]

127 Know the market.

At URS, we are at the forefront of managing critical, high-hazard projects. We are a market leader, bringing global expertise in operations, decommissioning and environmental restoration.

POWER INFRASTRUCTURE FEDERAL INDUSTRIAL & COMMERCIAL

URSCORP.COM US Ecology VJ Technologies, Inc. Contact: Chad Hyslop Booth #: 700 Contact: Steve Halliwell Booth #: 1035 300 East Mallard Dr, Suite 300, Boise, ID 83706 P: 631-589-8800 F: 631-589-8992 P: 208-331-8400 F: 208-331-7900 Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Website: www.vjt.com Website: www.usecology.com VJ Technologies is a world leader in nuclear waste US Ecology is the nation’s most comprehensive inspection systems and services utilizing advanced x- supplier of cost-effective treatment and disposal ray imaging technologies. Since 1987, we have services for low-level radioactive wastes, hazardous supplied, installed and maintained state-of-the-art and PCB wastes and naturally occurring, accelerator radioscopy systems for government & industry. In produced and exempt radioactive materials. US addition, our fleet of trailer-based real-time Ecology has provided radioactive waste services since radiography systems enable us to provide turnkey 1952 and hazardous waste services since 1968. mobile waste inspection solutions wherever needed.

Visionary Solutions, LLC Wagstaff Applied Technologies Contact: Carla Riles, Booth #: Semi B Contact: Mike Niccolls Booth #: 403 111 Union Valley Rd, Suite B, Oakridge, TN 37830 3910 N. Flora Rd, Spokane, WA 99216 P: 865-482-8670 P: 509-927-3321 F: 509-924-0241 Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Website: www.vs-llc.com Website: www.wagstaff.com

Visionary Solutions, LLC (VS) is an 8 (a), Small Wagstaff AT provides the nuclear industry with Disadvantaged Business specializing in logistics, mechanical/electrical engineering, fabrication, transportation, emergency preparedness and machining, assembly and test services. It also response training and technical services for Federal provides automated control systems, robotics, and commercial clients in the nuclear industry. Our custom single-acting hydraulic cylinders and primary focus is to provide safe, accurate and hydraulic power units. Projects include conveyor compliant solutions to complex technical issues systems, rolling carriages, rails, cask/container relative to the packaging, transport and disposition of lidding machines, fresh fuel containers, container lids legacy waste, difficult nuclear materials and sensitive and CO2 blast systems. technology and equipment. Waste Control Specialists LLC Vista Engineering Technologies, LLC Contact: Dan Burns Booth #: 1007 Contact: Kaylea Johnson Booth #: 711 Three Lincoln Centre, Suite 1700, 5430 LBJ Freeway 1355 Columbia Park Trail, Richland, WA 99352 Dallas, TX 75240 P: 509-737-1377 F: 509-737-1383 P: 214-662-5422 Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Website: www.vistaengr.com Website: www.wcstexas.com

Vista Engineering is a small business providing Waste Control Specialists LLC (WCS) owns and engineering and technology development services. operates a treatment, storage and disposal facility Professional Engineering services include mechanical, located on a 1,338 acre site in Andrews County, electrical, civil, nuclear and environmental Texas. WCS is currently authorized to treat and engineering with specialized expertise in HVA, store a broad range of hazardous, toxic and corrosion and leak detection. radioactive waste including all classes of LLRW, MLLW Vista Engineering is also a leader in geotechnical TRU and GTCC; and disposal of LDR compliant toxic, services such as ground water monitoring and hazardous and NORM waste. In January 2009, WCS engineering design and analysis for FEA and CFD. received a final license to dispose of Class A, B and C LLW disposal for Texas Compact and Class A, B and C Vivid Learning Systems LLW/MLLW disposal for DOE. Contact: James Moss Booth #: 834 5728 Bedford St, Pasco, WA 99301 P: 509-545-1800 F: 509-542-8869 Email: [email protected] Website: www.learnatvivid.com

Vivid Learning Systems. Our purpose is simple: to improve people’s lives through innovation in human performance and strategic communications. Stop by our booth and we’ll show you how.

129 Wastren Advantage, Inc. (WAI) Weston Solutions, Inc. Contact: Steve Moore Booth #: 126 Contact: Deonna Hernandez Booth #: 424 1862 Shyville Rd, Suite 212, Piketon, OH 45661 3840 Commons Ave, NE, Albuquerque, NM 87109 P: 740-289-9761 F: 740-289-9759 P: 505-837-6536 F: 505-837-6595 Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Website: www.wastrenadvantage.com Website: www.westonsolutions.com

Wastren Advantage, Inc. (WAI) is an SBA-Certified Weston Solutions (WESTON) delivers environmental 8(a) small disadvantaged business headquartered in engineering solutions to industry and government Piketon, OH with 300 employees based in eight worldwide-site remediation, redevelopment, project offices throughout the US and an annual management and compliance. With focus on TRU revenue of $80 million in 2010. WAI provides waste Waste, Low Level and Mixed Waste Operations, management, environmental services, compliance and high hazard remediation. WESTON decontamination and decommissioning and facility and its affiliates implement hazardous and operations and maintenance to facilities throughout radiological waste operations throughout the US the DOE Complex. WorleyParson Polestar Wells Fargo Contact: Jodi Mix Booth #: 828 Contact: Glynis Priester Booth #: 134 601 Williams Blvd, Suite 4A, Richland, WA 99354 43564 Jackson Hole Circle, Leesburg, VA 20176 P: 509-946-8279 F: 509-946-8889 P: 703-932-8332 Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Website: www.worleyparsons.com

Westerman Nuclear WorleyParsons Polestar has provided remediation Contact: William Moore Booth #: 435 engineering, nuclear decommissioning, emergency 245 North Broad St, Bremen, OH 43107 preparedness, nuclear safety and facility operations P: 740-569-4143 x262 F: 740-569-4111 and management at numerous government energy Email: [email protected] facilities. We are a recognized leader within the US Website: www.westermancompanies.com DOE Complex in planning and execution of significant deactivation and decommissioning projects on Westerman Quality, integrity and competitive pricing schedule and within budget. have made Westerman a longtime leader in the production of tanks and pressure vessels. Capabilities Wright Industries Inc., A Doerfer Company for commercial nuclear power plants components, Contact: Nicole Guidry Booth #: 926 environmental tanks and casks. Westerman is 1520 Elm Hill Pike, Nashville, TN 37210 currently the world’s largest producer of enriched P: 615-361-4111 x3630 uranium hexafluoride (uf6) storage and Email: [email protected] transportation cylinders. All UF6 cylinders comply Website: www.doerfer.com with the NRC REG 10CFR71, Subpart H and ANSI N14.1. Wright Industries, a Doerfer Company, is a leading NQA-1 nuclear engineering and special equipment Westinghouse Electric Company supplier. Wright designs and/or builds-to-print, Contact: Claudia Scott Booth #: 618 complex systems including heat exchangers, 1000 Westinghouse Dr, Suite 352 gloveboxes, pressure vessels, process skids, Cranberry Township, PA 16066 automation subassemblies, precision fabrications, P: 412-374-6503 F: 412-374-3777 autoclaves, etc. used in reclamation and remediation Email: [email protected] efforts. Wheelift (A Doerfer Companies Technology) Website: www.westinghouse.com manufactures self-loading, self-propelled, all- directional-travel transporters which allow much Westinghouse Electric Company offers a wide range denser storage in an ISFSI. of nuclear plant products and services to utilities throughout the world, including fuel, spent fuel Zeosorb LLC management, service and maintenance, Contact: Al Letcher Booth #: 827 instrumentation and control and advanced nuclear PO Box 19010, Jean, NV 89019 plant designs. Nearly 50 percent of the nuclear P: 661-824-4337 F: 661-824-4337 power plants in operation worldwide and nearly 60 Email: [email protected] percent in the United States, are based on Website: www.zeosorb.com Westinghouse technology. Providing natural zeolites for radioactive waste absorption.

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WM2012 Conference Planning

Planning for the next conference for February 26 – March 1, 2012 is well underway. If you would like to participate as a presenter, or would like to volunteer with WMS, here are some milestones for your planning:

June 15, 2011 Call for Abstracts Issued

WM2012 will solicit abstracts describing research, development and operational experience over the complete spectrum of nuclear waste activities. Proposed topics are categorized into general tracks that are reviewed by the WMS Program Advisory Committee Members and will be posted on www.wmsym.org and mailed in early June.

August 19, 2011 Abstracts for WM2012 Due

Sept. 18 - 20, 2011 PAC Abstract Review Meeting

PAC Members gather in Phoenix to review submitted abstracts and create the preliminary program for the WM2012 Conference. Once finalized, authors are notified and draft papers are written.

November 1, 2011 Registration Opens

Registration for the conference is open online at www.wmsym.org in early November.

November 10, 2011 Draft Papers Due

Draft papers are submitted and reviewed in November by members of the PAC in their area of expertise. Authors are given several weeks for any requested updates or revisions and submit their final paper in January. The final program is updated and ready to be printed.

Feb. 26 – March 1, 2012 WM2012 Conference

For more information on the WM Symposia and the WM2012 Conference, please visit:

www.wmsym.org

PAC Volunteers

If you are interested in learning more about the Program Advisory Committee, please contact Gary Benda at [email protected] for more information.

WM2013 & WM2014 Conferences

The WM2013 Conference will be held February 24 – 28, 2013 and the WM2014 Conference will be held March 2 – 6, 2014 at the Phoenix Convention Center, West Building.

132 10114 XCD WM Symposium 2011 • February 2011 • Trim: 8.375˝ x 10.875˝ • Spine: 0.3125˝

Roy G. Post Foundation Benefit Golf Tournament 2011

Held at the Raven Golf Club at South Mountain in Phoenix on February 26th; The Roy G. Post Foundation Benefit Golf Tournament provides funding for scholarships for students in careers focusing on the advancement of safe management of nuclear materials. Please join us for the 2010 – 2011 Roy G. Post Scholarship presentation on Tuesday, March 1st at the Honors & Awards Luncheon.

Thank you to our 2011 Post Foundation Golf Sponsors for their Support!

Tournament Host

Silver Sponsors

The Roy G. Post Foundation is a non-profit organization formed by his students, peers and protégés to provide scholarships to students to develop careers in the safe management of nuclear materials and to participate in the annual WM Symposium. Dr. Post was the founding chief executive of WM Symposia, the sponsor of the annual international Waste Management conference. For more information on the Roy G. Post Foundation, please visit: www.roygpost.org