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1.
Inorg Chem ; 56(3): 1558-1573, 2017 Feb 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28124561

ABSTRACT

Molybdenum solubility is a limiting factor to actinide loading in nuclear waste glasses, as it initiates the formation of water-soluble crystalline phases such as alkali molybdates. To increase waste loading efficiency, alternative glass ceramic structures are sought that prove resistant to internal radiation resulting from radioisotope decay. In this study, selective formation of water-durable CaMoO4 in a soda lime borosilicate is achieved by introducing up to 10 mol % MoO3 in a 1:1 ratio to CaO using a sintering process. The resulting homogeneously dispersed spherical CaMoO4 nanocrystallites were analyzed using electron microscopy, X-ray diffraction (XRD), Raman and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopies prior to and post irradiation, which replicated internal ß-irradiation damage on an accelerated scale. Following 0.77 to 1.34 GGy of 2.5 MeV electron radiation CaMoO4 does not exhibit amorphization or significant transformation. Nor does irradiation induce glass-in-glass phase separation in the surrounding amorphous matrix, or the precipitation of other molybdates, thus proving that excess molybdenum can be successfully incorporated into a structure that it is resistant to ß-irradiation proportional to 1000 years of storage without water-soluble byproducts. The CaMoO4 crystallites do however exhibit a nonlinear Scherrer crystallite size pattern with dose, as determined by a Rietveld refinement of XRD patterns and an alteration in crystal quality as deduced by anisotropic peak changes in both XRD and Raman spectroscopy. Radiation-induced modifications in the CaMoO4 tetragonal unit cell occurred primarily along the c-axis indicating relaxation of stacked calcium polyhedra. Concurrently, a strong reduction of Mo6+ to Mo5+ during irradiation is observed by EPR, which is believed to enhance Ca mobility. These combined results are used to hypothesize a crystallite size alteration model based on a combination of relaxation and diffusion-based processes initiated by added energy from ß-impingement and second-order structural modifications induced by defect accumulation.

2.
Dalton Trans ; (37): 7613-6, 2009 Oct 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19759932

ABSTRACT

The tptz molecule is reduced by potassium into its anion-radical in the compound K(tptz)(2) (), whereas it is reductively coupled by SmI(2) and UI(3)(py)(4) into the bis-triazinide ligand in the dinuclear complexes [Sm(2)(tptz-tptz)(DMF)(8)][I](4).3.5DMF (.3.5DMF) and U(2)I(6)(tptz-tptz)(MeCN)(2).2MeCN (.2MeCN) where each metal ion occupies a pentadentate N(5) cavity of the [tptz-tptz](2-) ligand.

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