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Title: Advanced Electrochemical Separations of Actinide/Fission Products via the Control of Nucleation and Growth of Electrodeposits. Final Report

Technical Report ·
DOI:https://doi.org/10.2172/1595683· OSTI ID:1595683
 [1]
  1. Univ. of Idaho, Moscow, ID (United States)

This is the final report to the NEUP regarding the “Advanced Electrochemical Separations of Actinide/Fission products via the Control of Nucleation and Growth of Electrodeposits” project. This report describes the project activities conducted during the period October 01, 2016 through September 30, 2019. The report includes a brief statement of the project objectives and approach, followed by the details of the performed research activities and suggestion for the future work. It is well known that according to current knowledge the pyroprocessing of spent nuclear fuels invariably leads to the dendritic form of electrodeposits, which from technological point of view is undesirable for many reasons. The aim of this research was to study and preclude the formation of electrodeposits with dendritic morphology (of essential importance to FC-1 Program). This project is characterized with four novel study categories: (1) exploring electrodeposit morphology control by controlling the electrochemical deposition reaction rate, (2) the use of rotating disk electrode technique to distinguish the electrodeposition control modes (reaction rate vs. diffusion), (3) morphology studies of lanthanides (La) and actinides (U) in characteristic stages of nucleation and growth, (4) exploring the need for separation of electrochemical cell in compartments for cathodic and anodic reactions. All these study categories were applied on two distinct electrolyte systems (a) high temperature ionic liquids, i.e. molten LiCl-KCl salts, and (b) room temperature ionic liquids (compounds exclusively made of organic cations, and organic/inorganic anions). Because the quality (dense and smooth) of electrodeposits is a direct function of the electrochemical reduction rate (slower the better), the major expectation was that addition of organic molecules would provide the desired slowing down of electroreduction effect, avoiding the undesired dependence on mass transfer. What was learned is summarized in seven key areas.

Research Organization:
Univ. of Idaho, Moscow, ID (United States)
Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE Office of Nuclear Energy (NE), Nuclear Energy University Program (NEUP)
DOE Contract Number:
NE0008556
OSTI ID:
1595683
Report Number(s):
DOE/NEUP-16-10813; 16-10813; TRN: US2102610
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English