Hostname: page-component-7479d7b7d-767nl Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-11T08:02:27.190Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Study of Pyrochlore and Garnet-based Matrices for Actinide Wastes Produced by a Self-propagating High-temperature Synthesis

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 February 2011

Sergey V. Yudintsev
Affiliation:
IGEM RAS, Staromonetny per. 35, Moscow 119017, RUSSIA
Tatiana S. Ioudintseva
Affiliation:
IGEM RAS, Staromonetny per. 35, Moscow 119017, RUSSIA
Andrey V. Mokhov
Affiliation:
IGEM RAS, Staromonetny per. 35, Moscow 119017, RUSSIA
Boris S. Nikonov
Affiliation:
IGEM RAS, Staromonetny per. 35, Moscow 119017, RUSSIA
Eduard E. Konovalov
Affiliation:
IPPE, Bondarenko sq. 1, Obninsk 249033, RUSSIA
Sergey A. Perevalov
Affiliation:
GEOKHI RAS, Kosygina st 19, Moscow 117975, RUSSIA
Sergey V. Stefanovsky
Affiliation:
SIA Radon, 7th Rostovskii per. 2/14, Moscow 119121, RUSSIA
Alexander G. Ptashkin
Affiliation:
SIA Radon, 7th Rostovskii per. 2/14, Moscow 119121, RUSSIA
Eduard M. Glagovsky
Affiliation:
VNIINM, Rogova st. 5a, Moscow 123060, RUSSIA
Alexander V. Kouprine
Affiliation:
VNIINM, Rogova st. 5a, Moscow 123060, RUSSIA
Get access

Abstract

Actinide-containing wastes are among the most dangerous for the environment. Such waste streams originate from reprocessing operations with irradiated nuclear fuel and conversion of weapons-grade plutonium metal into dioxide. The long-term toxicity of actinides derives from the presence of isotopes with half-life varying from hundreds of years (Am241) to tens of thousands (Pu239) or even millions of years (Np237). Therefore, these waste fractions need to be incorporated into durable crystalline host phases. The matrices have to incorporate substantial amounts of actinides, and possess chemical durability and resistance to radiation damage. Complex oxides with fluorite-derived and garnet lattices meet these requirements. Self-propagating high-temperature synthesis (SHS) based on exothermic oxidizing-reduction reactions may be used for production of these waste forms. This technology has the following advantages: absence of extrinsic heating sources, low energy requirements for equipment, high reaction velocity, simplicity of design of processing equipment, feasibility of remote-handling the processes, and lack of considerable amounts of facility decommission wastes. The basic features of the SHS technology are as follows: duration of initiation is 0.05–5.0 sec, temperature in a combustion wave is within 1500–3000 °K, and the velocity of advance of the combustion wave is 1–150 mm/s. Two sets of samples composed of pyrochlore and garnet-type phases were produced with SHS. The first of them corresponds to nominal pyrochlore formulation Y2Ti2O7 doped with various amounts of actinides: 10–30 wt.% UO2, 10 wt % PuO2, 10 wt % NpO2, or 9.5 wt % UO2 + 0.5 wt % Am2O3. The precursor was prepared from oxides of the base phases (TiO2, Y2O3, AnO2), an oxidizer (MoO3), and Ti. In the second set of runs, the target phase was garnet (Y2.8Gd0.2)(Al4.7Ga0.3)O12, where Gd3+ was used as a surrogate for Am3+. The initial batches were composed of MoO3, Y2O3, Gd2O3, Al2O3, Ga2O3, and metallic Al. Phase compositions of the samples have been determined by XRD and SEM/EDS. Samples of the first series are composed of major pyrochlore with minor metallic Mo. The samples with 10 wt % actinides do not contain any separate actinide oxide phase. In the samples with 20 and 30 % UO2 a separate uranium oxide phase was observed. SEM/EDS data allows determination of the limit of solid solution of the pyrochlore phase with respect to tetravalent actinide (U) as 12–14 wt. %. Principle phases in the second series were garnet:

(Y2.82–2.88Gd0.13–0.14)(Al4.69–4.74Ga0.17–0.22Mo0.05–0.16)O12 and Mo-Al-Ga alloy. Small amounts of perovskite - (Y0.86Gd0.12)(Al0.93Ga0.05Mo0.03)O3, Mo, and Al oxides were also observed. Gd and Ga mainly entered in the garnet; small amounts of the elements were incorporated into perovskite (Gd), a metallic alloy, and perovskite (Ga).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Materials Research Society 2004

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

1. Actinide and fission product partitioning and transmutation, in V-th Intern. Information Exchange Meeting (Nuclear Energy Agency, Paris, 1999) EUR 18898 EN.Google Scholar
2. Ebbinghaus, B.B., VanKonynenburg, R.A., Ryerson, F.J. et al., in Waste Management '98 (Tucson, 1998), CD-Rom. Paper 65–04.Google Scholar
3. Ringwood, A.E., Miner. Mag. 49 (2) 159176 (1985).Google Scholar
4. Lifanov, F.A., Stefanovsky, S.V., and Sobolev, I.A., Radiochemistry (3), 98105 (1993).Google Scholar
5. Glagovsky, E.M., Yudintsev, S.V., and Kouprine, A.V., Radiochemistry (6) 3742 (2001).Google Scholar