2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.ultsonch.2015.01.016
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Sonochemical precipitation of amorphous uranium phosphates from trialkyl phosphate solutions and their thermal conversion to UP2O7

Abstract: Insoluble amorphous precipitates containing uranyl and phosphate ions are obtained by sonication of solutions of three uranyl precursors, UO2(X)2, X=NO3, CH3COO, CH3C(O)CHC(O)CH3 (acetylacetonate, acac), in triesters of phosphoric acid, OP(OR)3, R=Me (trimethyl phosphate, TMP), Et (triethyl phosphate, TEP). TMP and TEP are used as high-boiling solvents and they serve also as a source of phosphate anions. Sonolysis experiments were carried out under flow of Ar at 40°C on a Sonics and Materials VXC 500W system (… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(6 citation statements)
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References 50 publications
(55 reference statements)
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“… 103 Pinkas and coworkers utilized a sonochemical precipitation method to form insoluble amorphous uranium phosphates from UO 2 2+ precursors in trialkyl phosphate solutions. 104 In this sonolysis experiment, the high-boiling trialkyl phosphates served as a phosphate source to create some active species by the decomposition of ester molecules and then reacted with uranium precursors in the solution, followed by the obtained amorphous precipitates changing into crystalline uranium diphosphate (UP 2 O 7 ) when heated to 1000 °C. The efficiency of uranium removal was higher than 30% by sonochemical precipitation, which might become a potential remote separation technology for uranium in waste streams.…”
Section: Metal Compoundsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“… 103 Pinkas and coworkers utilized a sonochemical precipitation method to form insoluble amorphous uranium phosphates from UO 2 2+ precursors in trialkyl phosphate solutions. 104 In this sonolysis experiment, the high-boiling trialkyl phosphates served as a phosphate source to create some active species by the decomposition of ester molecules and then reacted with uranium precursors in the solution, followed by the obtained amorphous precipitates changing into crystalline uranium diphosphate (UP 2 O 7 ) when heated to 1000 °C. The efficiency of uranium removal was higher than 30% by sonochemical precipitation, which might become a potential remote separation technology for uranium in waste streams.…”
Section: Metal Compoundsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Pinkas et al obtained insoluble amorphous uranium phosphates from UO 2 2+ precursors in high-boiling trialkyl phosphate solutions by sonication. 96 Sonolysis experiments were carried out in a frequency of 20 kHz and a power of 0.49 W cm −3 under an argon flow at 40 °C, in which trialkyl phosphates served as a phosphate source creating phosphate species by the decomposition of ester molecules and then reacted with uranium precursors. The efficiency of uranium removal from the solution by sonochemical precipitation was higher than 30%, and the obtained amorphous uranium precipitates could change into crystalline uranium diphosphate (UP 2 O 7 ) when heated to 1000 °C.…”
Section: Secondary Sonosynthesismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To date, several techniques have been used for the separation and extraction of uranium from different aqueous streams. These include mainly solvent extraction [9][10][11][12], exchange resins [13][14][15][16], membrane-based extraction [17][18], reductive precipitation [19][20] and electrochemical extraction [21][22].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%