Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7963414 | Journal of Nuclear Materials | 2018 | 27 Pages |
Abstract
Sodium aluminum (iron) phosphate glass ceramics containing of up to 20â¯wt.% rare earth (RE) oxides simulating pyroprocessing waste were produced by melting at 1250â¯Â°C followed by either quenching or slow cooling to room temperature. The iron-free glass-ceramics were composed of major glass and minor phosphotridymite and monazite. The iron-bearing glass-ceramics were composed of major glass and minor monazite and Na-Al-Fe orthophosphate at low waste loadings (5-10â¯wt.%) and major orthophosphate and minor monazite as well as interstitial glass at high waste loadings (15-20â¯wt.%). Slowly cooled samples contained higher amount of crystalline phases than quenched ones. Monazite is major phase for REs. Leach rates from the materials of major elements (Na, Al, Fe, P) are 10â5-10â7â¯gâ¯cmâ2â¯dâ1, RE elements - lower than 10â5â¯gâ¯cmâ2â¯dâ1.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Energy
Nuclear Energy and Engineering
Authors
S.V. Stefanovsky, O.I. Stefanovsky, M.I. Kadyko, B.S. Nikonov,