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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Geochemical Interactions of Plutonium with Opalinus Clay Studied by Spatially Resolved Synchrotron Radiation Techniques

Daniel GrolimundTobias ReichAndré RossbergUgras KaplanJ. DrebertSamer Amayri

subject

MicroprobeAbsorption spectroscopyMineralogychemistry.chemical_elementSynchrotron radiation010501 environmental sciences010403 inorganic & nuclear chemistry01 natural scienceslaw.inventionPlutonium opalinus clay sorption XAS ROBLlawEnvironmental ChemistryDiffusion (business)0105 earth and related environmental sciencesChemistryRadioactive wasteSorptionGeneral ChemistryPlutoniumSynchrotron0104 chemical sciencesPlutoniumRadioactive WasteClayAluminum SilicatesSynchrotrons

description

Plutonium plays an important role within nuclear waste materials because of its long half-life and high radiotoxicity. The aim of this study was to investigate with high spatial resolution the reactivity of the more oxidized forms of Pu(V,VI) within Opalinus Clay (OPA) rock, a heterogeneous, natural argillaceous rock considered as a potential repository host. A combination of synchrotron based X-ray microprobe and bulk techniques was used to study the spatial distribution and molecular speciation of Pu within OPA after diffusion and sorption processes. Microscopic chemical images revealed a pronounced impact of geochemical heterogeneities concerning the reactivity of the natural barrier material. Spatially resolved X-ray absorption spectroscopy documented a reduction of the highly soluble Pu(V,VI) to the less mobile Pu(IV) within the argillaceous rock material, while bulk investigations showed second-shell scattering contributions, indicating an inner-sphere sorption of Pu on OPA components. Microdiffraction imaging identified the clay mineral kaolinite to play a key role in the immobilization of the reduced Pu. The findings provide strong evidence that reduction and immobilization do not occur as linked processes on a single reactive phase but as decoupled, subsequent, and spatially separated reactions involving different phases of the OPA.

https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.6b06528