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Actinide separation chemistry in nuclear waste streams and materials

Abstract

The separation of actinide elements from various waste materials, produced either in nuclear fuel cycles or in past nuclear weapons production, represents a significant issue facing developed countries. Improvements in the efficiencies of the separation processes can be expected to occur as a result of better knowledge of the elements in these complex matrices. The Nuclear Science Committee of the OECD/NEA has established a task force of experts in actinide separation chemistry to review current and developing separation techniques and chemical processes. The report consist of eight chapters. In Chapter 1 the importance of actinide separation chemistry in the fields of waste management and its background are summarized.In Chapter 2 the types of waste streams are classified according to their relative importance, by physical form and by source of actinides. The basic data of actinide chemical thermodynamics, such as oxidation states, hydrolysis, complexation, sorption, Gibbs energies of formation, and volatility, were collected and are presented in Chapter 3. Actinide analyses related to separation processes are also mentioned in this chapter. The state of the art of actinide separation chemistry is classified in three groups, including hydrometallurgy, pyrochemical process and process based on fields, and is described in Chapter 4 along  More>>
Publication Date:
Dec 01, 1997
Product Type:
Technical Report
Report Number:
NEA-NSC-DOC-97-19
Reference Number:
SCA: 400105; PA: AIX-29:049575; EDB-98:106748; SN: 98002003630
Resource Relation:
Other Information: DN: 340 refs.; PBD: Dec 1997
Subject:
40 CHEMISTRY; ACTINIDE COMPLEXES; ACTINIDES; CHEMICAL REACTION KINETICS; COLLOIDS; CROWN ETHERS; DECONTAMINATION; DESORPTION; DIAMEX PROCESS; DOSE LIMITS; ELECTROREFINING; EVAPORATION; EXTRACTION CHROMATOGRAPHY; HALIDES; HEALTH HAZARDS; HYDROLYSIS; HYDROMETALLURGY; ION EXCHANGE CHROMATOGRAPHY; ISOTOPE RATIO; LEACHING; MEMBRANES; OPTIMIZATION; ORGANIC ACIDS; POLYMERS; PRECIPITATION; PUREX PROCESS; PYROCHEMICAL REPROCESSING; RADIATION PROTECTION; RADIOACTIVE WASTE DISPOSAL; RADIOACTIVE WASTE STORAGE; RADIOACTIVE WASTES; RADIOLYSIS; RESIDUES; SESAME PROCESS; SLUDGES; SOLUBILITY; SOLVENT EXTRACTION; TALSPEAK PROCESS; TRACE AMOUNTS; TRAMEX PROCESS; TRANSMUTA...
OSTI ID:
653012
Research Organizations:
Nuclear Energy Agency, 75 - Paris (France)
Country of Origin:
NEA
Language:
English
Other Identifying Numbers:
Other: ON: DE98635461; TRN: XN9800106049575
Availability:
INIS; OSTI as DE98635461
Submitting Site:
INIS
Size:
116 p.
Announcement Date:
Oct 20, 1998

Citation Formats

None. Actinide separation chemistry in nuclear waste streams and materials. NEA: N. p., 1997. Web.
None. Actinide separation chemistry in nuclear waste streams and materials. NEA.
None. 1997. "Actinide separation chemistry in nuclear waste streams and materials." NEA.
@misc{etde_653012,
title = {Actinide separation chemistry in nuclear waste streams and materials}
author = {None}
abstractNote = {The separation of actinide elements from various waste materials, produced either in nuclear fuel cycles or in past nuclear weapons production, represents a significant issue facing developed countries. Improvements in the efficiencies of the separation processes can be expected to occur as a result of better knowledge of the elements in these complex matrices. The Nuclear Science Committee of the OECD/NEA has established a task force of experts in actinide separation chemistry to review current and developing separation techniques and chemical processes. The report consist of eight chapters. In Chapter 1 the importance of actinide separation chemistry in the fields of waste management and its background are summarized.In Chapter 2 the types of waste streams are classified according to their relative importance, by physical form and by source of actinides. The basic data of actinide chemical thermodynamics, such as oxidation states, hydrolysis, complexation, sorption, Gibbs energies of formation, and volatility, were collected and are presented in Chapter 3. Actinide analyses related to separation processes are also mentioned in this chapter. The state of the art of actinide separation chemistry is classified in three groups, including hydrometallurgy, pyrochemical process and process based on fields, and is described in Chapter 4 along with the relationship of kinetics to separations. In Chapter 5 basic chemistry research needs and the inherent limitation on separation processes are discussed. Prioritization of research and development is discussed in Chapter 6 in the context of several attributes of waste management problems. These attributes include: mass or volume of waste; concentration of the actinide in the waste; expected difficulty of treating the wastes; short-term hazard of the waste; long-term hazard of the waste; projected cost of treatment; amount of secondary waste. Based on the priority, recommendations were made for the direction of future research activities in actinide separation chemistry from view of basic chemical data and separation chemistry as shown in Chapter 7. (authors) 340 refs.}
place = {NEA}
year = {1997}
month = {Dec}
}