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1.
J Am Chem Soc ; 145(18): 10007-10014, 2023 May 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37097728

RESUMEN

As part of our exploration of plutonium-containing materials as potential nuclear waste forms, we report the first extended structure Pu(V) material and the first Pu(V) borate. Crystals of Na2(PuO2)(BO3) were grown out of mixed hydroxide/boric acid flux and found to crystallize in the orthorhombic space group Cmcm with lattice parameters of a = 9.9067(4) Å, b = 6.5909(2) Å, and c = 6.9724(2) Å. Na2(PuO2)(BO3) adopts a layered structure in which layers of PuO2(BO3)2- are separated by sodium cations. Plutonium is found in a pentagonal bipyramidal coordination environment, with axial Pu(V)-O plutonyl bond lengths of 1.876(3) Å and equatorial Pu-O bond lengths ranging from 2.325(5) to 2.467(3) Å. We find that the Pu(V)-O plutonyl bond lengths are approximately 0.1 Å longer than the reported Pu(VI)-O plutonyl bond lengths and shorter by approximately 0.033 Å than the corresponding U(V) uranyl bond lengths. Raman spectroscopy on single crystals was used to determine the PuO2+ plutonyl stretching and the equatorial breathing mode frequencies of the pentagonal bipyramidal coordination environment around plutonium. Density functional theory calculations were used to calculate the Raman spectrum to help identify the Raman bands at 690 and 630 cm-1 as corresponding to the plutonyl(V) ν1 stretch and the equatorial PuO5 breathing mode, respectively. UV-vis measurements on single crystals indicate semiconducting behavior with a band gap of ∼2.60 eV.

2.
Magn Reson Chem ; 61(7): 407-417, 2023 Jul.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36967631

RESUMEN

The Savannah River Site stores approximately 36 million gallons of radioactive and hazardous waste that contains approximately 245 million curies. The waste is sent through various chemical processes to reduce its volume and to separate various components. The facility plans to replace formic acid (a chemical used to reduce soluble mercury) with glycolic acid. Recycle solution with glycolate may flow back to the tank farm, where the glycolate can generate hydrogen gas by thermal and radiolytic mechanisms. The current analytical method for detecting glycolate (ion chromatography) in supernatant requires a large dilution to reduce interference from the nitrate anions. Hydrogen nuclear magnetic resonance is an analytical method that requires less sample dilution. It takes advantage of the CH2 group in glycolate. Liquid samples were spiked with four different levels of glycolate to build a calibration line, as it is recommended in the standard addition method. The detection and quantitation limits determined were 1 and 5 ppm, respectively, for 32 scans, which is well below the process limit of 10 ppm. In one test, 800 scans of a supernatant spiked with 1 ppm glycolate resulted in a -CH2 peak with a signal-to-noise ratio of 36.

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