The Science of the total environment | 2021

Impact of Ca(II) on the aqueous speciation, redox behavior, and environmental mobility of Pu(IV) in the presence of EDTA.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


The impact of calcium on the solubility and redox behavior of the Pu(IV)-EDTA system was investigated using a combination of undersaturation solubility studies and advanced spectroscopic techniques. Batch solubility experiments were conducted in 0.1 M NaCl-NaOH-HCl-EDTA-CaCl2 solutions at constant [EDTA] = 1∙10-3 M, 1 ≤ pHm ≤ 11, and 1∙10-3 M ≤ [CaCl2] ≤ 2∙10-2 M. Additional samples targeted brine systems represented by 3.5 M CaCl2 and WIPP simulated brine. Redox conditions were buffered with hydroquinone (pe + pH ≈ 9.5) with selected samples prepared in the absence of any redox buffer. All experiments were performed at T = 22 °C under Ar atmosphere. In-situ X-ray absorption spectroscopy indicated that PuO2(ncr,hyd) was the solubility-controlling phase during the lifetime of all experiments and that aqueous plutonium was present in the +IV oxidation state across all experimental conditions except at pHm ≈ 1, where a small fraction of Pu(III) was also identified. Current thermodynamic models overestimate Pu(IV)-EDTA solubility in the absence of calcium by approximately 1-1.5 log10-units and do not describe the nearly pH-independent, increased solubility observed with increased calcium concentrations. The ternary Pu(IV)-OH-EDTA system without calcium was reevaluated using solubility data obtained in this work and reported in the literature. An updated thermodynamic model including the complexes Pu(OH)(EDTA)-, Pu(OH)2(EDTA)2-, and Pu(OH)3(EDTA)3- was derived. Solubility data collected in the presence of calcium follows a pH-independent trend (log m(Pu)tot vs. pHm), which can only be explained by assuming the formation of a quaternary complex, tentatively defined as CaPu(OH)4(EDTA)2-, in solution. The significant enhancement of plutonium solubility observed in the investigated brine systems supports the formation of a quaternary complex that is not outcompeted by Ca(EDTA)2-, even in concentrated CaCl2 solutions. Although the exact stoichiometry of the complex may need to be revisited, this new quaternary complex has a pronounced impact on plutonium predominance diagrams over a broad range of pH, pe, and calcium concentrations that are relevant to nuclear waste disposal.

Volume 783
Pages \n 146993\n
DOI 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.146993
Language English
Journal The Science of the total environment

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