Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6335241 | Applied Geochemistry | 2014 | 37 Pages |
Abstract
Caesium-137 (t1/2 = 30 years) is a common contaminant at nuclear legacy sites. Often the mobility of 137Cs in the environment is governed by its sorption to charged sites within the sediment. To this end it is important to understand the sorption behaviour of caesium across a wide range of environmental conditions. This work investigates the effect of varying solution composition (pH and competing ions) on the sorption of caesium to micaceous aquifer sediment across a large concentration range (1.0 Ã 10â11 - 1.0 Ã 10â1 mol Lâ1 Cs+). Experimental results show that Cs+ exhibits three distinct sorption behaviours at three different concentration ranges. At very low concentrations < 1.0 Ã 10â6 mol Lâ1 Cs+ sorption was unaffected by competition with Na+ or H+ but significantly reduced in high ionic strength K+ solution. Secondly between 1 Ã 10â6 and 1.0 Ã 10â3 mol Lâ1 Cs+ is strongly sorbed in a neutral pH, low ionic strength background but sorption is significantly reduced in solutions with either a high concentration of Na+ or K+ ions or low pH. At high concentrations > 1.0 Ã 10â3 mol Lâ1 Cs+ sorption is reduced in all systems due to saturation of the sediment's sorption capacity. A multi-site cation exchange model was used to interpret the sorption behaviour. From this it was determined that at low concentrations Cs+ sorbs to the illite frayed edge sites only in competition with K+ ions. However, once the frayed edge sites are saturated the Cs+ sorbs to the Type II and Planar sites in competition with K+, Na+ and H+ ions. Therefore sorption of Cs+ at concentrations > 1.0 Ã 10â6 mol Lâ1 is significantly reduced in both high ionic strength and low pH solutions. This is a significant result with regard to predicting the migration of 137Cs+ in acidic or high ionic strength groundwaters.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geochemistry and Petrology
Authors
Adam J. Fuller, Samuel Shaw, Caroline L. Peacock, Divyesh Trivedi, Joe S. Small, Liam G. Abrahamsen, Ian T. Burke,