Technetium (99Tc) is a problematic fission product for
the long-term disposal of nuclear waste due to its long half-life, high
fission yield, and to the environmental mobility of pertechnetate, the
stable species in aerobic environments. One approach to preventing 99Tc
contamination is using sufficiently durable waste forms. We report the
incorporation of technetium into a family of synthetic spinel ferrites that
have environmentally durable natural analogs. A combination of X-ray
diffraction, X-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy, and chemical
analysis reveals that Tc(IV) replaces Fe(III) in octahedral sites and
illustrates how the resulting charge mismatch is balanced. When a large
excess of divalent metal ions is present, the charge is predominantly
balanced by substitution of Fe(III) by M(II). When a large excess of
divalent metal ions is absent, the charge is largely balanced by creation of vacancies among the Fe(III) sites (maghemitization). In most samples, Tc is present in Tc-rich regions rather than being homogeneously distributed.
Revised: October 31, 2017 |
Published: November 9, 2016
Citation
Lukens W.W., N. Magnani, T. Tyliszczak, C.I. Pearce, and D.K. Shuh. 2016.Incorporation of Technetium into Spinel Ferrites.Environmental Science & Technology 50, no. 23:13160-13168.PNNL-SA-127418.doi:10.1021/acs.est.6b04209