Title: Vitrification of high zirconia nuclear waste streams:
1Vitrification of high zirconia nuclear waste
streams
Andrew Connelly,
Dr. N. C. Hyatt and Dr. K. P. Travis
2Content
- Glass and nuclear waste
- Zirconia nuclear waste and glass
- EXAFS techniques and data analysis
- Results and discussion
- Conclusions
- Questions
3Introduction
- Two of the major issues for UK high level waste
vitrification - New and legacy waste streams
- Long term durability of vitrified product
- Man-made glass existed since Egyptians
- Glass science only really existed in last hundred
years - Prof. W. E. S. Turner
For better or worse I am part and parcel of
the glass industry
4Structural model
- First recognisable model proposed by Zachariasen
(1932) - Similarity in structure of crystals and glass
- e.g. bonding, extended 3D network
- Glass network non-periodic
- Silicate glass was made up of silica (network
forming) tetrahedra (SiO4) - Network modifiers (e.g. Na) breaks silicate
network. i.e. acts as a flux
O
Si
Zachariasen, W. H., Jou. Am. Chem. Soc, 54,
3841-3851, 1932
5Zachariasen-Warren, 1941
- The continuous random network theory
- Still widely used and still contentious
- Shows short and some medium range order
- Boron acts as a network former
Warren, B. E. Jou. Am. Chem. Soc.,24, 256-261,
1941
6Cations and the structure of glass
- Many elements added to change properties of glass
- Only relatively recently people have begun to
understood why the properties change - E.g. colour of glass
- Co2 in silicate glass (CN4) give a blue colour
- In certain borosilicate glasses (CN6) the colour
is pink
http//antoine.frostburg.edu/chem/senese/101/index
.shtml
7Glass and nuclear waste
- Glass developed into important nuclear waste
technology - Vitrification plays a vital role in the disposal
of nuclear waste (i.e. reprocessed calcine) - Glass held at 1050oC for 7 hours
- Tm lt1150-1200 ºC to minimize volatilisation of
fission products (e.g. 137Cs) - Long term durability and high waste loadings
critical
After Marples, J. Glass Tech., 1988, 29(6)
p.230-247
8Zirconia and nuclear waste
- Appears in fuel rods as a fission product and as
uranium oxide fuel cladding (Zircalloy) - Zr causes problems such as
- Low solubility in borosilicate glass
- Refractory nature of oxides (Tm 2700oC)
- Crystallisation of Zr oxides
- Increases viscosity
- Advantage
- Increases durability
- Increases strength
http//www.areva.com
9Alternative dissolution techniques
- New reprocessing process
- Complete chemical dissolution of Zircalloy fuel
rods - Involves significant amounts of fuel assembly
components being taken into solution
http//www.areva.com
10Glass melting
- Started with basic MW sodium lithium
borosilicate base glass
- Added various amounts of ZrO2
- Noticeable increase in viscosity with Zr
additions - Great difficulty in getting ZrO2 to dissolve in
glass - Made worse if used alumina crucible as compared
to platinum crucibles. - Also maded full (simulant) waste stream glasses
- Blend and Magnox - 25 wt waste loading (ISL
reference compositions) - Chemical dissolution (High Zr) 15 wt waste
loading (Matlack, 1999)
Matlack, K. mat. Sci. Res. Soc. Sym. Pro, 1999,
556, 247-254
11Glass compositions studied
Can be reduced to 1050 ºC with small additions as
replacement for SiO2
12Check where Zr is
- SEM and XRD confirm Zr is in glass matrix not
present as crystals - RuO2 crystals in blend, high Zr and Magnox glass
- High Zr glass shows very small number of ZrO2
crystals
13X-ray Absorption Spectroscopy
- Technique for examining short range order in
materials - Uses characteristic X-rays to probe local
environment of a specific ion - Very useful for amorphous materials where there
is no long range structure - X-rays from a synchrotron radiation source are
transmitted through sample
http//www.p-ng.si/arcon/xas/xas/xas.htm
14EXAFS details
- Absorption of X-ray photon, emmission of
photoelectron - In a monatomic gas get smooth decrease in
absorption - In all other materials get wiggles
- Caused by interaction of emitted photoelectron
with neighboring atoms - Interference effects changes the probability of
X-ray absorption - EXAFS oscillations 30-2000 eV past edge
http//www.p-ng.si/arcon/xas/xas/xas.htm
15EXAFS - what it can show us
- These EXAFS oscillations determined by
- Number, Nj, and type of scatters in successive
co-ordination shells - Absorber scatterer distance, Rj
- Static and dynamic disorder Debye-Waller
factor, 2s2
Phase shift
Absorption
Amplitude factor
16EXAFS data
1. Data was collected on station 16.5 at the SRS
in Daresbury. Energy scanned to 12 Å-1 using
(220) Si monochromator.
XANES
2. Two traces per sample, data summed and then
background subtracted using Exspline.
17Data analysis
3. Map a theoretical fit to the experimental data
using Excurv98 and the EXAFS equation.
4. Fourier Transform to give radial distribution
function (RDF) with Zr at 0 Å
18Elements not resolved
- Elements with low electron density
- E.g. Li, B, etc.
19First model
Zr
O
20Second model
Zr
O
Si
Previous best
21Third model
Na
Zr
O
Si
Previous best
22Fourth model
Zr
O
Zr
Si
Comparison
23Fifth model
Na
Zr
O
Si
Comparison
24EXAFS results
Zr
O
Si
25All results for Second model
Zr
O
Si
26Change in properties with composition
- Zirconium increases strength of silicate network
by direct bonding - Sodium needed for charge balance
- This strengthening of silicate network believed
to cause variation in chemical and mechanical
properties
27Durability Soda-silica glass
- Work done in Sheffield in 1925 was first
systematic survey of glass durability - Powdered and washed samples boiled for 1 hr
variously in - Water, NaOH, Na2CO3, and HCl(aq)
- ZrO2 bearing glasses found to most durable under
all conditions
6SiO2(2-x) Na2O xRO or R2O3 or RO2
Dimbleby, V. Turner, W. E. S. Jou. Soc. Gla.
Tech., 1925, 10, p304-358
28Durability borosilicate glass
- Powdered and washed samples under room
temperature static leach conditions - Shows overall increase in durability for all
elements - Abnormality at low n for Na and B
- Possibly caused by small scale phase separation
or change in alternation layer morphology
Lobanova, M. Mat. Res. Soc. Proc., 713, 571-579,
2002
29Practicalities
- High zirconia waste can be vitrified with a waste
loading of at least 15 wt - Zirconia
- interacts and strengthens silicate glass network
- significantly improvement on durability of
borosilicate glass - increases viscosity significantly however,
additions allow low temperature melting - May cause phase separation
- Further work to be carried out on Zr and
durability
30Conclusions
- Chemical dissolution sourced waste can be
vitrified with a waste loading of at least 15 wt - Zr becomes part of the silicate network
- Zr increases durability of glass
- Work still needed into role of boron and lithium
in high zirconia borosilicate glasses.
31Any Questions?
Andrew Connelly ISL University of
Sheffield a.connelly_at_shef.ac.uk
- Thank you to
- Neil Hyatt, Karl Travis, Russell Hand and Ewan
Madrell - EPSRC and Nexia Solutions for financial support