Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1568102 | Journal of Nuclear Materials | 2009 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
The spent electrolyte of the pyroprocessing by metal electrorefining method should be considered for recycling after removal of fission products (FP) such as, alkali metals (AL), alkaline earth metals (ALE), and/or rare earth elements (REE), to reduce the volume of high-level radioactive waste. Among the various methods suggested for this purpose is precipitation by converting FP from chlorides to phosphates. Authors have been carrying out the theoretical analysis and experiment showing the behaviours of phosphate precipitates so as to estimate the feasibility of this method. From acquired results, it was found that AL except lithium and ALE are unlikely to form phosphate precipitates. However their conversion behaviours including REE were compatible with the theoretical analysis; in the case of LaPO4 as one of the REE precipitates, submicron-size particles could be observed while that of Li3PO4 was larger; the precipitates were apt to grow larger at higher temperature; etc.
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Nuclear Energy and Engineering
Authors
I. Amamoto, H. Kofuji, M. Myochin, Y. Takasaki, T. Terai,