
Crews are nearly finished deactivating the second of three collections of old, mercury-contaminated equipment around the Alpha-4 facility at the Y-12 National Security Complex at Oak Ridge, a press release said.
The project addresses potential environmental risks and moves the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Environmental Management a step closer to preparing one of Y-12’s largest high-risk contaminated facilities for demolition, the press release said.
The column exchange, or COLEX, structures are connected to the four-story 500,000-square-foot Alpha-4 building, which was used for uranium separation from 1944 to 1945. Workers finished installing the COLEX equipment in 1955 for lithium separation, a process that required large amounts of mercury. A significant amount of the mercury was lost into the equipment, buildings, and surrounding soils, and its cleanup is one of EM’s top priorities.

In 2018, DOE cleanup contractor UCOR demolished the COLEX equipment on the west end of the building after retrieving 4.6 tons of mercury. The effort prevented a possible significant release of mercury into the surrounding environment, the press release said.
In April, UCOR began deactivating the COLEX structures on the east end of the building. As crews close in on completing deactivation, expected in late November, they have so far captured another 1.25 tons of mercury from cleanup in those pipes and tanks, the release said.
“Much of our current East COLEX workforce was also involved in the deactivation and demolition of West COLEX, and they have done an excellent job using that previous experience to safely and effectively complete this deactivation effort,†said Dan Macias, UCOR Oak Ridge Reservation environmental cleanup manager.

So far, those crews have safely deactivated nearly 2,500 linear feet of process piping, abated 300 feet of asbestos, and removed all universal waste from East COLEX, the press release said. The final portion of the COLEX equipment, located on the south side of Alpha-4, will be addressed in future years.
“EM is also advancing construction on the Mercury Treatment Facility, the linchpin for EM’s cleanup strategy at Y-12 that enables large-scale mercury cleanup,” the press release said. “It will prevent potential mercury releases into a nearby creek and allow EM to demolish massive mercury-contaminated buildings and address sources or mercury in the soil beneath them.”
The facility, scheduled to begin operating in 2025, will treat up to 3,000 gallons of water per minute.
More information will be added as it becomes available.
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