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1.
Rev Sci Instrum ; 95(2)2024 Feb 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38310638

ABSTRACT

To understand the speciation of solutes in aqueous solutions in high temperature radiation environments, we report the design and fabrication of a custom-built, high temperature (≤300 °C) titanium irradiation cell with in situ optical spectroscopy capabilities, as afforded by coupled fiber optic cables. The wetted surfaces of the 8-inch tall cylindrical cell with 3.5 in. diameter are entirely made of titanium, sapphire, and gold, which are chemically and radiolytically inert. The initial benchmarking results are reported, including the baseline spectrum of deionized water as a function of temperature, the stability of a spectrum over 4 h at 100 °C, and an irradiated Fricke dosimetry solution under ambient irradiator temperature conditions (27.0 ± 0.5 °C). The average gamma radiation dose rate in the cell in its current configuration is 26.1 ± 1.3 Gy min-1. This cell has application in studying several processes throughout the nuclear fuel cycle, including the reactor coolant behavior.

2.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 26(2): 749-759, 2024 Jan 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37800279

ABSTRACT

Empirical measurements of solution vapor pressure of ternary acetonitrile (MeCN) H2O-NaCl-MeCN mixtures were recorded, with NaCl concentrations ranging from zero to the saturation limit, and MeCN concentrations ranging from zero to an absolute mole fraction of 0.64. After accounting for speciation, the variability of the Henry's law coefficient at vapor-liquid equilibrium (VLE) of MeCN ternary mixtures decreased from 107% to 5.1%. Solute speciation was modeled using a mass action solution model that incorporates solute solvation and ion-pairing phenomena. Two empirically determined equilibrium constants corresponding to solute dissociation and ion pairing were utilized for each solute. When speciation effects were considered, the solid-liquid equilibrium of H2O-NaCl-MeCN mixtures appear to be governed by a simple saturation equilibrium constant that is consistent with the binary H2O-NaCl saturation coefficient. Further, our results indicate that the precipitation of NaCl in the MeCN ternary mixtures was not governed by changes in the dielectric constant. Our model indicates that the compositions of the salt-induced liquid-liquid equilibrium (LLE) boundary of the H2O-NaCl-MeCN mixture correspond to the binary plateau activity of MeCN, a range of concentrations over which the activity remains largely invariant in the binary water-MeCN system. Broader comparisons with other ternary miscible organic solvent (MOS) mixtures suggest that salt-induced liquid-liquid equilibrium exists if: (1) the solution displays a positive deviation from the ideal limits governed by Raoult's law; and (2) the minimum of the mixing free energy profile for the binary water-MOS system is organic-rich. This work is one of the first applications of speciation-based solution models to a ternary system, and the first that includes an organic solute.

3.
J Phys Chem A ; 111(3): 468-71, 2007 Jan 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17228895

ABSTRACT

A pulsed, two-beam, thermal lensing experiment was performed to determine the concentration of aqueous solutes above the critical point of water. Despite a very significant mirage effect due to thermal gradients in the cell and absorption by water itself, the thermal lensing signal strength for aqueous benzoic acid in supercritical water was found to be linear with concentration in the sub-millimolar range. Although thermal lensing experiments in aqueous media are notoriously insensitive, the sharp density gradient near the critical point considerably improves the signal intensity. In this study a short-pulse pump 266 nm YAG laser and continuous low-power probe Ar ion beam were both focused into a supercritical water cell, giving a lensing signal whose strength could be maximized by changing the overlap of the two beams.

4.
Ultrason Sonochem ; 13(3): 283-6, 2006 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16359905

ABSTRACT

The effect of surface acoustic waves, generated on a silver catalyst using a comb transducer, on the catalytic decomposition of ethanol is examined. The comb transducer employs purely mechanical means for surface acoustic wave (SAW) transduction. Unlike interdigital SAW transducers on piezoelectric substrates, the complicating effects of heat generation due to electromechanical coupling, high electric fields between adjacent electrodes, and acoustoelectric currents are avoided. The ethanol decomposition reactions are carried out at 473 K. The rates of acetaldehyde and ethylene production are retarded when acoustic waves are applied. The rates recover to varying degrees when acoustic excitation ceases.

5.
J Org Chem ; 62(21): 7324-7329, 1997 Oct 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11671847

ABSTRACT

The photodimerization reaction of anthracene in supercritical CO(2) was studied systematically at different CO(2) densities. Unlike in normal liquid solvents, the reaction in supercritical CO(2) is significant even at anthracene concentrations as low as a few micromolar. At comparable anthracene concentrations, the photodimerization reaction is 1 order of magnitude more efficient in CO(2) than in normal liquid solvents. The dramatic increases in the photodimerization reaction efficiency in supercritical CO(2) may be explained by a mechanism in which the reaction is diffusion-controlled even when the diffusion rate constants are on the order of 10(11) M(-1) s(-1). The results also show that the efficient photodimerization reaction of anthracene is hardly affected by the local density augmentation (or solute-solvent clustering) in supercritical CO(2).

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