313-4 Incorporation of Perrhenate (Tc-99 Surrogate) Into Sodalite and the Stability of Tc(VII) to Ion Exchange in the Presence of Competing Ions.
Poster Number 2329
See more from this Division: S09 Soil MineralogySee more from this Session: Ecosystem-Mineral Interactions: III
To elucidate the role of competing anion size on the structure and reactivity of sodalite, we reacted 1.25 M NaOH with zeolite 4A (source of Al and Si), 0.88 and/or 1.76 M solutions of Cl-, NO3-, CO32-, SO42-, MnO4-, or WO42-, and 0 to 1.76 M NaReO4. Initially, we utilized nonradioactive perrhenate (ReO4-) as a surrogate for TcO4- as their ionic radii are both 0.56 Å, however final results will be confirmed with 99Tc. Perrhenate concentrations in the resulting sodalite ranged from 0 to 13 mmol kg-1 in the 0 to 0.88 M ReO4- samples reaching 760 mmol kg-1 of ReO4- in the 1.76 M ReO4- sample without competing anions. Using the 211 x-ray diffraction peak, ReO4- sodalite was characterized by a lower degree 2θ diffraction peak relative to sodalite that incorporated smaller anions. Prolonged aging time suggests increased crystallinity; however, enclathration of ReO4- into the sodalite framework was inconsistent. We concluded that the occupancy of sodalite β-cages by anions is directly related to the size of the effective ionic radii and decreases in the following order: Cl->NO3->CO32->SO42->MnO4->ReO4->WO42-, suggesting that 99Tc found in Hanford tank waste stream loaded with competing anions such as NO3, NO2, Cl, SO4 etc. is unlikely to be sequestered in sodalite. However, as sodalite group mineral possesses a flexible framework structure, which can expand or deform to host guest anions of varying ionic sizes, future work will be directed at elucidating structural changes that sodalite undergoes to accommodate large anions such as 99Tc oxyanion.
[1] Chorover, J., Choi, S., Rotenberg, P., Serne, R.J., Rivera, N., Strepka, C., Thompson, A., Mueller, K.T., O'Day, P.A., 2008, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 72, 2024-2047.
[2] Deng, Y., Harsh, J.B., Flury, M., Young, J.S., and Boyle, J.S. 2006, Applied Geochemistry, 21, 1392-1409.
See more from this Session: Ecosystem-Mineral Interactions: III