Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1568918 | Journal of Nuclear Materials | 2008 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
A pyrochlore-structured titanate ceramic has been studied in respect of its overall feasibility for immobilisation of impure actinide-rich radioactive wastes through the hot isostatic pressing (HIPing) technique. The resultant waste form contains mainly pyrochlore (∼70%), rutile (∼14%) as well as perovskite (∼12%), hollandite (∼2%) and brannerite (∼1%). Optical spectroscopy confirms that uranium (used to simulate Pu) exists mainly in the stable pyrochlore-structured phase as tetravalent ions as designed. The stainless steel/waste form interactions under HIPing conditions (1280 °C/100 MPa/3 h) do not seem to change the actinide-bearing phases and therefore should have no detrimental effect on the waste form.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Energy
Nuclear Energy and Engineering
Authors
Yingjie Zhang, Huijun Li, Sam Moricca,