Phosphate controls uranium release from acidic waste-weathered Hanford sediments.

J Hazard Mater

Department of Environmental Science, University of Arizona, 1177 East Fourth Street, Tucson, ARI 85721, USA.

Published: August 2021

Mineral dissolution and secondary phase precipitation may control the fate of inorganic contaminants introduced to soils and sediments during liquid waste discharges. When the solutions are aggressive enough to induce transformation of native minerals, incorporated contaminants may be released during dissolution due to percolation of meteoric waters. This study evaluated the release of uranium (U) from Hanford sediments that had been previously reacted for 180 or 365 days with liquid waste solutions containing U with and without 3 mM dissolved phosphate at pH 2 and 3. Flow-through column experiments were conducted under continuous saturated flow with a simulated background porewater (BPW; pH ~7) for 22 d. Up to 5% of the total U was released from the sediments reacted under PO-free conditions, attributable to the dissolution of becquerelite and boltwoodite formed during weathering. Contrastingly, negligible U was released from PO-reacted sediments, where meta-ankoleite was identified as the main U-mineral phase. Linear combination fits of U L-edge EXAFS spectra of sediments before and after BPW leaching and thermodynamic calculations suggest that the formed becquerelite and meta-ankoleite transformed into schoepite and a phosphuranylite-type phase, respectively. These results demonstrate the stabilization of U as recalcitrant uranyl minerals formed in sediments and highlight the key role of PO in U release at contaminated sites.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhazmat.2021.126240DOI Listing

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