September 19, 2018
Report

Aluminum Hydroxide Solubility in Sodium Hydroxide Solutions Containing Nitrite/Nitrate of Relevance to Hanford Tank Waste

Abstract

The technical basis to support the One System River Protection Project Integrated Flowsheet assumption for diluting staged direct feed low-activity waste (DFLAW) from the Hanford waste tanks with raw river water must be assessed in light of the risk of aluminum hydroxide (gibbsite) precipitation prior to the subsequent transfer of tank contents into the low-activity waste pretreatment system (LAWPS) and/or the Tank Side Cesium Removal (TSCR) system from days to months after dilution. Aluminum solubility must be predicted as a function of the significant variables that influence gibbsite dissolution and precipitation. These variables include (i) other solution components that meaningfully affect the activity coefficient of either hydroxide or the aluminate ion, particularly nitrate and nitrite; and (ii) temperature. Based on a review of waste solubility data and the impact of dilution on solution stabilities with specific focus on aluminum hydroxide (Delegard et al. 2018), data gaps associated with the impact of these variables on the prediction of gibbsite solubility with temperature were identified. An experimental program to aid in the prediction of gibbsite solubility in NaOH solutions containing a range of sodium nitrate and sodium nitrite concentrations up to the solubility limit at a range of temperatures has been conducted. The results of these investigations are summarized in this report.

Revised: September 17, 2020 | Published: September 19, 2018

Citation

Delegard C.H., C.I. Pearce, M. Dembowski, M. Snyder, I.I. Leavy, S.R. Baum, and M.S. Fountain. 2018. Aluminum Hydroxide Solubility in Sodium Hydroxide Solutions Containing Nitrite/Nitrate of Relevance to Hanford Tank Waste Richland, WA: Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.