2005
DOI: 10.1016/j.jnucmat.2004.10.095
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Corrosion of alkali–borosilicate waste glass K-26 in non-saturated conditions

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Cited by 55 publications
(54 citation statements)
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“…Borosilicate glasses are of growing interest, especially for nuclear waste encapsulation [5,6], but they are already familiar both within and without laboratories, as pyrex is an optimized borosilicate glass, selected in 1915 from thousands of compositions for its optimized ability to sustain mechanical shock [7]. The ability to resist thermal shock depends on thermal expansivity, and because of thermal fluctuations during quenching there is a good correlation between the two abilities to resist shock [8].…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Borosilicate glasses are of growing interest, especially for nuclear waste encapsulation [5,6], but they are already familiar both within and without laboratories, as pyrex is an optimized borosilicate glass, selected in 1915 from thousands of compositions for its optimized ability to sustain mechanical shock [7]. The ability to resist thermal shock depends on thermal expansivity, and because of thermal fluctuations during quenching there is a good correlation between the two abilities to resist shock [8].…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Leaching mechanism can be classified into two general categories: 1) initial wash off and 2) diffusion control. On the basis of parameters A 1 and leaching coefficient D e [8], in different cement matrix formulations, we have noticed that leaching rate of Cs 137 > Co 60 which is matched with other studies [1][2][3][4]. We have also observed that Cs 137 and Co 60 cumulative amount of leached, f, decreased in order f (C-II) > f (C-IV) > f (C-I) > f (C-III).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Second partial in equation (5), represent the leach coefficient of transport mechanism, D e (cm 2 /d) [8][9][10][11].…”
Section: Radionuclide Migration Through Porous Materials and Modellinmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[61] Equations [11] and [14] reveal that ion exchange occurs preferentially in acidic and neutral solutions but diminishes quickly with the increase of pH, whereas hydrolysis occurs preferentially in basic solutions but diminishes quickly with the decrease of pH. It is normally considered that for pH < 9 to 10, ion exchange dominates glass corrosion, whereas hydrolysis reactions are significant when the pH exceeds 9.…”
Section: ½10mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This occurs because the activation energy for hydrolysis E a is significantly higher than the activation energies of diffusive processes E dA . It has been shown that the diffusion-controlled ion exchange stage is dominant up to a time, s(T), given by [58,61] …”
Section: ½10mentioning
confidence: 99%