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1.
J Hazard Mater ; 458: 131884, 2023 Sep 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37348372

ABSTRACT

Immobilization of radioactive borate waste (RBW) using a geopolymer with a high Si/Al ratio has been challenging because boron-silicon networks lower the compressive strength and delay the setting time. In this study, metakaolin-based geopolymer waste form to immobilize simulant RBW was fabricated using different Si/Al ratios (1.0-1.4) and curing temperatures (26 and 60 â„ƒ). The 7-day compressive strength results revealed that a certain amount of silicon and an elevated curing temperature are required to achieve high compressive strength and waste loading. Following waste acceptance criteria tests, all geopolymers exhibited compressive strengths higher than 3.445 MPa. The leachability index of boron was higher than 6.0, and the leaching mechanism was identified as diffusion. No significant structural changes in the geopolymer were observed after thermal cycling and gamma irradiation tests. The physically bound or unincorporated RBW was leached out of the geopolymer during water immersion and leaching tests; however, boron, which was chemically connected with silicon, was present as an inert phase together with a geopolymer binder. Consequently, immobilizing RBW using a geopolymer with a low Si/Al ratio (1.4) is beneficial in terms of RBW loading and structural durability.

2.
J Hazard Mater ; 419: 126402, 2021 10 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34157467

ABSTRACT

Radioactive borate waste containing a high concentration of boron (B) is problematic to be solidified using cement because soluble borate such as boric acid hinders the hydration reaction. In this study, borate waste was used as a raw material for metakaolin-based geopolymer according to the characteristic that B replaces a part of Si. Geopolymers using KOH alkaline activator (K-geopolymers) showed higher compressive strength than geopolymers using NaOH alkaline activator (Na-geopolymer). In addition, the compressive strength increased proportionally to the Si/(Al+B) ratio regardless of the alkaline cation species. These variations in compressive strength might be due to the viscosity of the geopolymer mixture, atomic size of alkaline cations, and the increase in Si content. The characteristic analyses (XRD, FT-IR, and solid state 11B MAS NMR) indicated that B was incorporated into the geopolymer structure. Thus, the K-geopolymer has a dense and homogeneous microstructure. In a semi-dynamic leaching test, less B leached from the geopolymers compared to the cement waste form. Consequently, borate waste can be solidified using metakaolin-based geopolymer, and the use of a KOH alkaline activator is advantageous in terms of mechanical property and structural durability.


Subject(s)
Radioactive Waste , Borates , Compressive Strength , Construction Materials , Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared
3.
Sci Total Environ ; 716: 136167, 2020 May 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31955840

ABSTRACT

Radioactive iodine-129 (129I) and technetium-99 (99Tc) pose a risk to groundwater due to their long half-lives, toxicity, and high environmental mobility. Based on literature reviewed in Moore et al. (2019) and Pearce et al. (2019), natural and engineered materials, including iron oxides, low-solubility sulfides, tin-based materials, bismuth-based materials, organoclays, and metal organic frameworks, were tested for potential use as a deployed technology for the treatment of 129I and 99Tc to reduce environmental mobility. Materials were evaluated with metrics including capacity for IO3- and TcO4- uptake, selectivity and long-term immobilization potential. Batch testing was used to determine IO3- and TcO4- sorption under aerobic conditions for each material in synthetic groundwater at different solution to solid ratios. Material association with IO3- and TcO4- was spatially resolved using scanning electron microscopy and X-ray microprobe mapping. The potential for redox reactions was assessed using X-ray absorption near edge structure spectroscopy. Of the materials tested, bismuth oxy(hydroxide) and ferrihydrite performed the best for IO3-. The commercial Purolite A530E anion-exchange resin outperformed all materials in its sorption capacity for TcO4-. Tin-based materials had high capacity for TcO4-, but immobilized TcO4- via reductive precipitation. Bismuth-based materials had high capacity for TcO4-, though slightly lower than the tin-based materials, but did not immobilize TcO4- by a redox-drive process, mitigating potential negative re-oxidation effects over longer time periods under oxic conditions. Cationic metal organic frameworks and polymer networks had high Tc removal capacity, with TcO4- trapped within the framework of the sorbent material. Although organoclays did not have the highest capacity for IO3- and TcO4- removal in batch experiments, they are available commercially in large quantities, are relatively low cost and have low environmental impact, so were investigated in column experiments, demonstrating scale-up and removal of IO3- and TcO4- via sorption, and reductive immobilization with iron- and sulfur-based species.

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