Back to Search
Start Over
Cesium and Strontium Contamination of Nuclear Plant Stainless Steel : Implications for Decommissioning and Waste Minimization
- Source :
- Lang, A, Engelberg, D, Walther, C, Weiß, M, Bosco, H, Jenkins, A, Livens, F & Law, G 2019, ' Cesium and Strontium Contamination of Nuclear Plant Stainless Steel : Implications for Decommissioning and Waste Minimization ', ACS Omega, vol. 4, pp. 14420-14429 . https://doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.9b01311, ACS Omega, ACS Omega, Vol 4, Iss 11, Pp 14420-14429 (2019), ACS omega 4 (2019)
- Publication Year :
- 2019
-
Abstract
- Stainless steels can become contaminated with radionuclides at nuclear sites. Their disposal as radioactive waste would be costly. If the nature of steel contamination could be understood, effective decontamination strategies could be designed and implemented during nuclear site decommissioning in an effort to release the steels from regulatory control. Here, batch uptake experiments have been used to understand Sr and Cs (fission product radionuclides) uptake onto AISI Type 304 stainless steel under conditions representative of spent nuclear fuel storage (alkaline ponds) and PUREX nuclear fuel reprocessing (HNO3). Solution (ICP-MS) and surface measurements (GD-OES depth profiling, TOF-SIMS, and XPS) and kinetic modeling of Sr and Cs removal from solution were used to characterize their uptake onto the steel and define the chemical composition and structure of the passive layer formed on the steel surfaces. Under passivating conditions (when the steel was exposed to solutions representative of alkaline ponds and 3 and 6 M HNO3), Sr and Cs were maintained at the steel surface by sorption/selective incorporation into the Cr-rich passive film. In 12 M HNO3, corrosion and severe intergranular attack led to Sr diffusion into the passive layer and steel bulk. In HNO3, Sr and Cs accumulation was also commensurate with corrosion product (Fe and Cr) readsorption, and in the 12 M HNO3 system, XPS documented the presence of Sr and Cs chromates.
- Subjects :
- ADSORPTION
CORROSION BEHAVIOR
General Chemical Engineering
116 Chemical sciences
chemistry.chemical_element
02 engineering and technology
010402 general chemistry
SORPTION
01 natural sciences
Article
Nuclear decommissioning
DECONTAMINATION
Dalton Nuclear Institute
stainless steel
radionuclide
QD1-999
TEMPERATURE
X-RAY PHOTOELECTRON
ACCUMULATION
Radionuclide
Strontium
SPECTROSCOPY
Waste management
SURFACES
fungi
technology, industry, and agriculture
food and beverages
Radioactive waste
Sorption
General Chemistry
Human decontamination
Contamination
021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology
6. Clean water
0104 chemical sciences
PRODUCTS
Chemistry
ResearchInstitutes_Networks_Beacons/dalton_nuclear_institute
chemistry
13. Climate action
Caesium
ddc:540
ddc:660
radioactive waste
Environmental science
0210 nano-technology
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Lang, A, Engelberg, D, Walther, C, Weiß, M, Bosco, H, Jenkins, A, Livens, F & Law, G 2019, ' Cesium and Strontium Contamination of Nuclear Plant Stainless Steel : Implications for Decommissioning and Waste Minimization ', ACS Omega, vol. 4, pp. 14420-14429 . https://doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.9b01311, ACS Omega, ACS Omega, Vol 4, Iss 11, Pp 14420-14429 (2019), ACS omega 4 (2019)
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....7ced16efb7984529a2796f2bafbe2d10
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.9b01311