127 research outputs found
Impact of the degradation leachate of the polyacrylonitrile-based material UP2W on the retention of Ni(II), Eu(III) and Pu(IV) by cement
The uptake of Ni(II), Eu(III) and Pu(IV) by hardened cement paste (HCP, CEM I) in the degradation stage II (pH ≈ 12.5, [Ca] ≈ 0.02 M) was investigated in the presence of a degradation leachate of UP2W, a polyacrylonitrile-based (PAN) material used as a filter aid in nuclear power plants. The degradation leachate with a concentration of dissolved organic carbon of ∼40 ppm was obtained from the degradation of UP2W in portlandite-buffered solutions for ca. 1100 days. Redox conditions in the Pu systems were buffered with hydroquinone, which defines mildly reducing conditions (pe + pH ≈ 10) where Pu(IV) is the predominant oxidation state. The degradation leachate investigated in this work is moderately sorbed by cement, with distribution ratios (R) of (0.35 ± 0.15) m kg. These values are 30 to 100 times greater than distribution ratios previously reported for proxy ligands of PAN degradation products, i.e., glutaric acid, α-hydroxyisobutyric acid and 3-hydroxybutyric acid. The presence of the degradation leachate induces a moderate decrease in the uptake of Ni(II), Eu(III) and Pu(IV) by cement, as compared to the sorption in the presence of the proxy ligands. Nevertheless, retention in the presence of the degradation leachate remains high for all investigated radionuclides, with Rd(Ni(II)) ≈ 2 m kg, Rd(Eu(III)) ≈ 100 m kg and Rd(Pu(IV)) ≈ 30 m kg. These observations possibly reflect that the multiple functionalities (–COOH, –OH, amide groups) expected in the macromolecules (10–15 kDa) present in the degradation leachate, can offer further binding/chelating capabilities compared to the small organic proxy ligands with at most bidentate binding
Solubility of Ca( ii ), Ni( ii ), Nd( iii ) and Pu( iv ) in the presence of proxy ligands for the degradation of polyacrylonitrile in cementitious systems
The solubility of Ca(OH)(cr), β-Ni(OH)(cr), Nd(OH)(s) and PuO(ncr, hyd) was investigated in cement porewater solutions containing glutarate (GTA), α-hydroxyisobutarate (HIBA) and 3-hydroxybutarate (HBA). These ligands were proposed as probable degradation products of UP2W, a polyacrylonitrile-based filter aid used in nuclear power plants. Results obtained in this work are compared with reported solubility data in the presence of iso-saccharinic acid (ISA), a polyhydroxocarboxylic acid resulting from cellulose degradation. None of the investigated proxy ligands shows any significant impact on the solubility of Ca(II), Nd(III) or Pu(IV) in cement porewater solutions. Although the formation of binary complexes M–L (M = Ca(II), Nd(III), An(IV); L = GTA, HIBA, HBA) under acidic conditions is described in the literature, these organic ligands cannot outcompete hydrolysis under hyperalkaline conditions. GTA, HIBA and HBA induce a slight increase in the solubility of β-Ni(OH)(cr) at [L] = 0.1 M. This observation supports the formation of stable Ni(II)–GTA, –HIBA and –HBA complexes in hyperalkaline conditions, although the exact stoichiometry of these complexes remains unknown. The comparison of these results with solubility data in the presence of ISA confirms the stronger complexation properties of the latter ligand. Even though HIBA and HBA are carboxylic acids containing one alcohol group, this comparison shows that additional alcohol groups are required to efficiently chelate the metal ion and outcompete hydrolysis. This conclusion is supported by DFT calculations on the Pu(IV)-OH–L systems (L = GTA, HIBA and HBA), which indicate that the complexation with the proxy ligands takes places through the carboxylate group. XRD of selected solid phases after equilibration with proxy ligands at [L] = 0.1 M confirms that Ca(II), Ni(II), Nd(III) and Pu(IV) starting solid materials remained mostly unaltered in the course of the experiments. However, the presence of new XRD features suggests the possible formation of secondary phases. These results allow assessment of the effect of the proposed proxy ligands on the solubility of key radionuclides and metal ions in cementitious systems relevant for low and intermediate level waste, and feed into on-going sorption studies evaluating the impact of UP2W degradation products on the uptake of radionuclides by cement
Pu(III) and Cm(III) in the presence of EDTA: aqueous speciation, redox behavior, and the impact of Ca(II)
The impact of calcium on the solubility, redox behavior, and speciation of the An(iii)–EDTA (An = Pu or Cm) system under reducing, anoxic conditions was investigated through batch solubility experiments, X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS), density functional theory (DFT), and time-resolved laser fluorescence spectroscopy (TRLFS). Batch solubility experiments were conducted from undersaturation using Pu(OH)(3)(am) as the solid phase in contact with 0.1 M NaCl–NaOH–HCl–EDTA–CaCl(2) solutions at [EDTA] = 1 mM, pH(m) = 7.5–9.5, and [CaCl(2)] ≤20 mM. Additional samples targeted brine systems represented by 3.5 M CaCl(2) and WIPP simulated brine. Solubility data in the absence of calcium were well-described by Pu(iii)–EDTA thermodynamic models, thus supporting the stabilization of Pu(iii)–EDTA complexes in solution. Cm(iii)–EDTA TRLFS data suggested the stepwise hydrolysis of An(iii)-EDTA complexes with increasing pH, and current Pu(iii)-EDTA solubility models were reassessed to evaluate the possibility of including Pu(iii)–OH–EDTA complexes and to calculate preliminary formation constants. Solubility data in the presence of calcium exhibited nearly constant log m(Pu)(tot), as limited by total ligand concentration, with increasing [CaCl(2)](tot), which supports the formation of calcium-stabilized Pu(iii)–EDTA complexes in solution. XAS spectra without calcium showed partial oxidation of Pu(iii) to Pu(iv) in the aqueous phase, while calcium-containing experiments exhibited only Pu(iii), suggesting that Ca–Pu(iii)–EDTA complexes may stabilize Pu(iii) over short timeframes (t ≤45 days). DFT calculations on the Ca–Pu(iii)–EDTA system and TRLFS studies on the analogous Ca–Cm(iii)–EDTA system show that calcium likely stabilizes An(iii)–EDTA complexes but can also potentially stabilize An(iii)–OH–EDTA species in solution. This hints towards the possible existence of four major complex types within Ca–An(iii)–EDTA systems: An(iii)–EDTA, An(iii)–OH–EDTA, Ca–An(iii)–EDTA, and Ca–An(iii)–OH–EDTA. While the exact stoichiometry and degree of ligand protonation within these complexes remain undefined, their formation must be accounted for to properly assess the fate and transport of plutonium under conditions relevant to nuclear waste disposal
Performance of ab initio and density functional methods for conformational equilibria of CnH2n+2 alkane isomers (n=2-8)
Conformational energies of n-butane, n-pentane, and n-hexane have been
calculated at the CCSD(T) level and at or near the basis set limit.
Post-CCSD(T) contribution were considered and found to be unimportant. The data
thus obtained were used to assess the performance of a variety of density
functional methods. Double-hybrid functionals like B2GP-PLYP and B2K-PLYP,
especially with a small Grimme-type empirical dispersion correction, are
capable of rendering conformational energies of CCSD(T) quality. These were
then used as a `secondary standard' for a larger sample of alkanes, including
isopentane and the branched hexanes as well as key isomers of heptane and
octane. Popular DFT functionals like B3LYP, B3PW91, BLYP, PBE, and PBE0 tend to
overestimate conformer energies without dispersion correction, while the M06
family severely underestimates GG interaction energies. Grimme-type dispersion
corrections for these overcorrect and lead to qualitatively wrong conformer
orderings. All of these functionals also exhibit deficiencies in the conformer
geometries, particularly the backbone torsion angles. The PW6B95 and, to a
lesser extent, BMK functionals are relatively free of these deficiencies.
Performance of these methods is further investigated to derive conformer
ensemble corrections to the enthalpy function, , and the Gibbs
energy function, , of these alkanes. While
is only moderately sensitive to the level of theory, exhibits more pronounced sensitivity. Once again, double hybrids
acquit themselves very well.Comment: J. Phys. Chem. A, revised [Walter Thiel festschrift
Vector Bosons in the Randall-Sundrum 2 and Lykken-Randall models and unparticles
Unparticle behavior is shown to be realized in the Randall-Sundrum 2 (RS 2)
and the Lykken-Randall (LR) brane scenarios when brane-localized Standard Model
currents are coupled to a massive vector field living in the five-dimensional
warped background of the RS 2 model. By the AdS/CFT dictionary these
backgrounds exhibit certain properties of the unparticle CFT at large N_c and
strong 't Hooft coupling. Within the RS 2 model we also examine and contrast in
detail the scalar and vector position-space correlators at intermediate and
large distances. Unitarity of brane-to-brane scattering amplitudes is seen to
imply a necessary and sufficient condition on the positivity of the bulk mass,
which leads to the well-known unitarity bound on vector operators in a CFT.Comment: 60 pages, 8 figure
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