INGENIERIE+SAG:YSC:DFAThe number and strength of adsorption sites for Xe in silver-modified zeolites are estimated from isotherm measurements at various temperatures over a broad range of pressure (from 1 ppm to atmospheric pressure). Fully and partially exchanged silver zeolites were synthesized starting from Na-ZSM-5(25), Na-ZSM-5(40), Na-Beta, NaX, and NaY. We have discovered that silver-modified zeolites may present one or two distinct adsorption sites depending on the nature of the material and silver loadings. The strongest adsorption sites are characterized by isosteric heat of adsorption in the order of -40 to -50 kJ.mol(-1). For Pentasil-type zeolites, we observe a linear 2:1 correlation between the total amount of silver and the number of strong sites. The highest concentration of strong sites is found for fully silver exchanged ZSM-5 (5.7 X 10(-4) mol/g), which presents the largest silver content for Pentasil-type zeolite. The equilibrium constant of Ag-ZSM-5 at low pressure is about 50 times larger than that of AgX. Qualitative correlations were established between Xe adsorption isotherms and Xe NMR signals. We show that Xe NMR could be used as a quantitative method for the characterization of the strength and of the number of strong Xe adsorption sites on silver-exchanged zeolites. The numbers of strong adsorption sites responsible for the Xe adsorption at 10-1000 ppm can be determined by the length of the plateau observed at low Xe uptake. In practice, our findings give guidelines for the discovery and optimization of silver-loaded zeolites for the capture of Xe at ppm levels. It appears that the amount of silver is a key parameter. Silver-modified ZSM-5 shows adsorption capacities 2-3 orders of magnitude larger than currently applied adsorbents for atmospheric Xe capture
International audienceMolecular simulation is used to unravel the adsorption mechanisms of xenon on Ag-doped ZSM-5 zeolite. We show that silver nanoparticles, which form at the external surface of zeolite crystallites, are responsible for enhanced xenon physisorption at very low pressure. We also propose a simple model of adsorption on such composite materials made up of silver-exchanged zeolites and silver nanoparticles adsorbed at the zeolite surface. This model, which allows predicting the adsorption of other gases without any additional parameters, provides a tool to characterize the amount of reduced silver as well as the silver particle size distribution (in good agreement with transmission electron microscopy images). The presence of a majority of silver nanoparticles is further characterized by means of X-ray diffraction and X-ray Absorption Spectroscopy at the silver K edge
Complexation of trivalent actinides with DTPA (diethylenetriamine pentaacetic acid) was studied as a function of pcH and temperature in (Na,H)Cl medium of 0.1 M ionic strength. Formation constants of both complexes AnHDTPA(-) and AnDTPA(2-) (where An stands for Am, Cm, and Cf) were determined by TRLFS, CE-ICP-MS, spectrophotometry, and solvent extraction. The values of formation constants obtained from the different techniques are coherent and consistent with reinterpreted literature data, showing a higher stability of Cf complexes than Am and Cm complexes. The effect of temperature indicates that formation constants of protonated and nonprotonated complexes are exothermic with a high positive entropic contribution. DFT calculations were also performed on the An/DTPA system. Geometry optimizations were conducted on AnDTPA(2-) and AnHDTPA(-) considering all possible protonation sites. For both complexes, one and two water molecules in the first coordination sphere of curium were also considered. DFT calculations indicate that the lowest energy structures correspond to protonation on oxygen that is not involved in An-DTPA bonds and that the structures with two water molecules are not stable.
In the framework of nuclear waste disposal, it is very important to well understand the behavior of actinides in the presence of the common environmental inorganic ligands such as sulfate and chloride. In this work, the AnO2SO4(-) and AnO2Cl 1-1 complexes have been evidenced by capillary electrophoresis-inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (CE-ICPMS) in perchlorate/chloride and in perchlorate/sulfate media for An = Np and Pu. Their binding constants have been measured: log beta(PuO2SO4(-))(0) = 1.30 +/- 0.11, log beta(PuO2Cl)(1 M NaCl) = -(0.40 +/- 0.07), log beta(NpO2SO4(-))(0) = 1.34 +/- 0.12, and log beta(NpO2Cl)(1 M NaCl) = -(0.40 +/- 0.07). These results are consistent with published values for Np(V). They confirm the expected analogy between Np(V) and Pu(V) for the weak bonding with chloride ligand, log10 beta(PuO2Cl) approximately = log10 beta(NpO2Cl), attributed to mainly electrostatic interactions. Conversely, a slight shift is observed for the bonding with sulfate ligand, log10 beta(NpO2SO4(-)) > log10 beta(PuO2SO4(-)), indicating that some covalency might stabilize the sulfate complexes.
The complexation of protactinium(V) by oxalate was studied by X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS), density functional theory (DFT) calculations, capillary electrophoresis coupled with inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (CE-ICP-MS) and solvent extraction. XAS measurements showed unambiguously the presence of a short single oxo-bond, and the deduced structure agrees with theoretical calculations. CE-ICP-MS results indicated the formation of a highly charged anionic complex. The formation constants of PaO(C(2)O(4))(+), PaO(C(2)O(4))(2)(-), and PaO(C(2)O(4))(3)(3-) were determined from solvent extraction data by using protactinium at tracer scale (C(Pa) < 10(-10) M). Complexation reactions of Pa(V) with oxalate were found to be exothermic with relatively high positive entropic variation.
Direct determination of the stability constants of some pentavalent actinides (Np and Pu) with carbonate ligands was investigated by CE-ICP-sector field MS (SFMS). The high sensitivity of ICP-SFMS coupled with the high separation power of CE makes it possible to determine the mobility of each species as well as the stability constants with good accuracy. A procedure for preparing pentavalent plutonium at trace level has been successfully tested enabling the study of Pu(V) complexation by CE-ICP-SFMS. Stability constants beta1, beta2 and beta3 have been obtained at 25 +/- 1 degrees C at a constant ionic strength of 0.37 M in NaClO4 for K1 and NaCl for beta2 and beta3. The results were extrapolated to zero ionic strength and compared with data available in the literature for Np(V). The following stability constants were obtained for a Pu(V)/CO3 system: logbeta(1)(0) = 4.95 +/- 0.10, logbeta(2)(0) = 6.34 +/- 0.10, and logbeta(3)(0) = 5.61 +/- 0.16.
Rare gas capture and purification is a major challenge for energy, environment, and health applications. Of utmost importance for the nuclear industry, novel separation processes for Xe are urgently needed for spent nuclear fuel reprocessing and nuclear activity monitoring. The recovered, non-radioactive Xe is also of high economic value for lighting, surgical anesthetic, etc. Here, using adsorption and breakthrough experiments and statistical mechanics molecular simulation, we show the outstanding performance of zeolite-supported silver nanoparticles to capture/separate Xe at low concentrations (0.087-100 ppm). We also establish the efficiency of temperature swing adsorption based on such adsorbents for Xe separation from Kr/Xe mixtures and air streams corresponding to off-gases generated by nuclear reprocessing. This study paves the way for the development of novel, cost-efficient technologies relying on the large selectivity/capacity of adsorbent-supported silver nanoparticles which surpass all materials ever tested.
The electrophoretic mobilities (mu ep,Ln) of twelve lanthanides (not Ce, Pr and Yb) were measured by CE-ICP-MS in 0.15 and 0.5 mol L(-1) Alk2 CO3 aqueous solutions for Alk+ = Li+, Na+, K+ and Cs+. In 0.5 mol L(-1) solutions, two different mu ep,Ln values were found for the light (La to Nd) and the heavy (Dy to Tm) lanthanides, which suggests two different stoichiometries for the carbonate limiting complexes. These results are consistent with a solubility study that attests the Ln(CO3)3(3-) and Ln(CO3)4(5-) stoichiometries for the heavy (small) and the light (big) lanthanides, respectively. The Alk+ counterions influence the mu ep,Ln Alk2 CO3 values, but not the overall shape of the mu ep,Ln Alk2 CO3 plots as a function of the lanthanide atomic numbers: the counterions do not modify the stoichiometries of the inner sphere complexes. The influence of the Alk+ counterions decreases in the Li+ > Na+ >> K+ > Cs+ series. The K3,Ln stepwise formation constants of the Ln(CO3)3(3-) complexes slightly increase with the atomic numbers of the lanthanides while K4,Ln, the stepwise formation constants of Ln(CO3)4(5-) complexes, slightly decrease from La to Tb, and is no longer measurable for heavier lanthanides.
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