April 1, 2013
Journal Article

Crystallization of rhenium salts in a simulated low-activity waste borosilicate glass

Abstract

This study presents a new method for looking at the solubility of volatile species in simulated low-activity waste glass. The present study looking at rhenium salts is also applicable to real applications involving radioactive technetium salts. In this synthesis method, oxide glass powder is mixed with the volatiles species, vacuum-sealed in a fused quartz ampoule, and then heat-treated under vacuum in a furnace. This technique restricts the volatile species to the headspace above the melt but still within the sealed ampoule, thus maximizing the volatile concentration in contact with the glass. Various techniques were used to measure the solubility of rhenium in glass and include energy dispersive spectroscopy, wavelength dispersive spectroscopy, laser ablation inductively-coupled plasma mass spectroscopy, and inductively-coupled plasma optical emission spectroscopy. The Re-solubility in this glass was determined to be ~3004 parts per million Re atoms. Above this concentration, the salts separated out of the melt as inclusions and as a low viscosity molten salt phase on top of the melt observed during and after cooling. This salt phase was analyzed with X-ray diffraction, scanning electron microscopy as well as some of the other aforementioned techniques and identified to be composed of alkali perrhenate and alkali sulfate.

Revised: June 4, 2013 | Published: April 1, 2013

Citation

Riley B.J., J.S. McCloy, A. Goel, M. Liezers, M.J. Schweiger, J. Liu, and C.P. Rodriguez, et al. 2013. Crystallization of rhenium salts in a simulated low-activity waste borosilicate glass. Journal of the American Ceramic Society 96, no. 4:1150-1157. PNNL-SA-89210. doi:10.1111/jace.12280