December 1, 2010
Journal Article

Crystallization during processing of nuclear waste glass

Abstract

In glass processing situations involving glass crystallization, various crystalline forms nucleate, grow, and dissolve, typically in a nonuniform temperature field of molten glass subjected to convection. Nuclear waste glasses are remarkable examples of multicomponent vitrified mixtures involving partial crystallization. In the glass melter, crystals form and dissolve during batch-to-glass conversion, melter processing, and product cooling. Crystals often agglomerate and sink, and they may settle at the melter bottom. Within the body of cooling glass, multiple phases crystallize in a non-uniform time-dependent temperature field. Self-organizing periodic distribution (the Liesegnang effect) is common. Various crystallization phenomena that occur in glassmaking are reviewed.

Revised: February 23, 2011 | Published: December 1, 2010

Citation

Hrma P.R. 2010. Crystallization during processing of nuclear waste glass. Journal of Non-crystalline Solids 356, no. 52-54:3019-3025. PNNL-SA-68761.