Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5454374 | Journal of Nuclear Materials | 2016 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
Borosilicate glass-ceramics are being developed to immobilize high-level waste generated by aqueous reprocessing into a stable waste form. The corrosion behavior of this multiphase waste form is expected to be complicated by multiple phases and crystal-glass interfaces. A modified single-pass flow-through test was performed on polished monolithic coupons at a neutral pH (25 °C) and 90 °C for 33 d. The measured glass corrosion rates by micro analysis in the samples ranged from 0.019 to 0.29 g mâ2 dâ1 at a flow rate per surface area = 1.73 Ã 10â6 m sâ1. The crystal phases (oxyapatite and Ca-rich powellite) corroded below quantifiable rates, by micro analysis. While, Ba-rich powellite corroded considerably in O10 sample. The corrosion rates of C1 and its replicate C20 were elevated an order of magnitude by mechanical stresses at crystal-glass interface caused by thermal expansion mismatch during cooling and unique morphology (oxyapatite clustering).
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Nuclear Energy and Engineering
Authors
Jarrod V. Crum, James J. Neeway, Brian J. Riley, Zihua Zhu, Matthew J. Olszta, Ming Tang,