Technetium incorporation into magnetite and its behavior during subsequent oxidation has been investigated at high pH to determine the technetium retention mechanism(s) on formation and oxidative perturbation of magnetite in systems relevant to radioactive waste disposal. Ferrihydrite was exposed to Tc(VII)(aq) containing cement leachates (pH 10.5-13.1), and crystallization of magnetite was induced via addition of Fe(II)aq. A combination of X-ray diffraction (XRD), chemical extraction, and X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) techniques provided direct evidence that Tc(VII) was reduced and incorporated into the magnetite structure. Subsequent air oxidation of the magnetite particles for up to 152 days resulted in only limited remobilization of the incorporated Tc(IV). Analysis of both X-ray absorption near edge structure (XANES) and extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) data indicated that the Tc(IV) was predominantly incorporated into the magnetite octahedral site in all systems studied. On reoxidation in air, the incorporated Tc(IV) was recalcitrant to oxidative dissolution with less than 40% remobilization to solution despite significant oxidation of the magnetite to maghemite/goethite: All solid associated Tc remained as Tc(IV). The results of this study provide the first direct evidence for significant Tc(IV) incorporation into the magnetite structure and confirm that magnetite incorporated Tc(IV) is recalcitrant to oxidative dissolution. Immobilization of Tc(VII) by reduction and incorporation into magnetite at high pH and with significant stability upon reoxidation has clear and important implications for limiting technetium migration under conditions where magnetite is formed including in geological disposal of radioactive wastes.
Ferrihydrite was exposed to U(VI)-containing cement leachate (pH 10.5) and aged to induce crystallization of hematite. A combination of chemical extractions, TEM, and XAS techniques provided the first evidence that adsorbed U(VI) (≈3000 ppm) was incorporated into hematite during ferrihydrite aggregation and the early stages of crystallization, with continued uptake occurring during hematite ripening. Analysis of EXAFS and XANES data indicated that the U(VI) was incorporated into a distorted, octahedrally coordinated site replacing Fe(III). Fitting of the EXAFS showed the uranyl bonds lengthened from 1.81 to 1.87 Å, in contrast to previous studies that have suggested that the uranyl bond is lost altogether upon incorporation into hematite. The results of this study both provide a new mechanistic understanding of uranium incorporation into hematite and define the nature of the bonding environment of uranium within the mineral structure. Immobilization of U(VI) by incorporation into hematite has clear and important implications for limiting uranium migration in natural and engineered environments.
Understanding interactions between radionuclides and mineral phases underpins site environmental cleanup and waste management in the nuclear industry. The transport and fate of radionuclides in many subsurface environments are controlled by adsorption, redox, and mineral incorporation processes. Interactions of iron (oxyhydr)oxides with uranium have been extensively studied because of the abundance of uranium as an environmental contaminant and the ubiquity of iron (oxyhydr)oxides in engineered and natural environments. Despite this, detailed mechanistic information regarding the incorporation of uranium into Fe(II)-bearing magnetite and green rust is sparse. Here, we present a co-precipitation study in which U(VI) was reacted with environmentally relevant iron(II/III) (oxyhydr)oxide mineral phases. On the basis of diffraction, microscopic, dissolution, and spectroscopic evidence, we show the reduction of U(VI) to U(V) and stabilization of the U(V) by incorporation within the near surface and bulk of the particles during co-precipitation with iron (oxyhydr)oxides. U(V) was stable in both magnetite and green rust structures and incorporated via substitution for octahedrally coordinated Fe in a uranate-like coordination environment. As the Fe(II)/Fe(III) ratio increased, a proportion of U(IV) was also precipitated as surface-associated UO2. These novel observations have significant implications for the behavior of uranium within engineered and natural environments.
Here we examine the bioreduction of technetium-99 in sediment microcosm experiments with varying nitrate and carbonate concentrations added to synthetic groundwater to assess the influence of pH and nitrate on bioreduction processes. The systems studied include unamended-, carbonate buffered-, low nitrate-, and high nitrate-groundwaters. During anaerobic incubation, terminal electron accepting processes (TEAPs) in the circumneutral pH, carbonate buffered system progressed to sulfate reduction, and Tc(VII) was removed from solution during Fe(III) reduction. In the high-nitrate system, pH increased during denitrification (pH 5.5 to 7.2), then TEAPs progressed to sulfate reduction. Again, Tc(VII) removal was associated with Fe(III) reduction. In both systems, XAS confirmed reduction to hydrous Tc(IV)O(2) like phases on Tc removal from solution. In the unamended and low-nitrate systems, the pH remained low, Fe(III) reduction was inhibited, and Tc(VII) remained in solution. Thus, nitrate can have complex influences on the development of the metal reducing conditions required for radionuclide treatment. High nitrate concentrations stimulated denitrification and caused pH neutralization facilitating Fe(III) reduction and Tc(VII) removal; acidic, low nitrate systems showed no Fe(III)-reduction. These results have implications for Tc-cycling in contaminated environments where nitrate has been considered undesirable, but where it may enhance Fe(III)-reduction via a novel pH "conditioning" step.
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