?5Mo magic-angle spinning nuclear magnetic resonance (MAS NMR) spectroscopy is
surprisingly sensitive to the local environment of tetrahedral molybdate species. A series of compounds related to expected crystallization products in nuclear waste glasses are probed to calibrate their spectral characteristics. Glasses formed with fast and slow quenching show a glassy peak corresponding to tetrahedral molybdate species. With slow quenching, a prominent sharp peak is observed, representing crystallinity. In sodium-borosilicate glasses with 2.5 mol% MoO3, the sharp peak corresponds to pure crystalline sodium molybdate. Cesium-sodium and
lithium-sodium borosilicate glasses with Mo show crystalline peaks as well, and suggest that NMR may potentially be used to characterize mixed-cation molydates and more complex phase assemblages. While precise quantification of Mo in different phases is likely to be timeconsuming, reasonable estimates can be obtained routinely, making ?5Mo MAS NMR a useful tool for investigating phase separation and crystallization in model nuclear waste materials.
Revised: April 7, 2011 |
Published: April 1, 2009
Citation
Kroeker S., S. Kroeker, I.E. Farnan, S. Schuller, S. Schuller, T. Advocat, and T. Advocat. 2009.?5Mo NMR Study of Crystallization in Model Nuclear Waste Glasses. In Scientific Basis for Nuclear Waste Management XXXII, Materials Research Society Proceedings of the Fall Meeting, 1124, Art. No. 1124-Q03-06. New York, New York:Plenum Press.