Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6438184 | Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2015 | 17 Pages |
Abstract
These results indicated that in the young cement leachate, U(VI) did not react with the calcite surface unless U(VI) concentrations were very low (5.27 Ã 10â5 μM). At higher concentrations, speciation calculations suggested that U(VI) was significantly oversaturated and experimental observations confirmed it existed in a colloidal form that interacted with the mineral surface only weakly. In the old cement leachate systems at low concentrations batch sorption and luminescence data suggested that U(VI) removal was being driven by a surface complexation mechanism. However, at higher concentrations, spectroscopic methods suggest a combination of both surface complexation and surface mediated precipitation was responsible for the observed removal. Overall, U(VI) behaviour in hyperalkaline calcite systems is distinct from that at circumneutral pH conditions: at high pH and anything but low U(VI) concentrations, a surface mediated precipitation mechanism occurs; this is in contrast to circumneutral pH conditions where U(VI) surface complexation reactions tend to dominate.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geochemistry and Petrology
Authors
Kurt F. Smith, Nicholas D. Bryan, Adam N. Swinburne, Pieter Bots, Samuel Shaw, Louise S. Natrajan, J. Frederick W. Mosselmans, Francis R. Livens, Katherine Morris,