Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 8 de 8
Filtrar
Más filtros










Base de datos
Intervalo de año de publicación
1.
ACS Omega ; 9(10): 12135-12145, 2024 Mar 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38496959

RESUMEN

Within the front end of the nuclear fuel cycle, many processes impart forensic signatures. Oxygen-stable isotopes (δ18O values) of uranium-bearing materials have been theorized to provide the processing and geolocational signatures of interdicted materials. However, this signature has been minimally utilized due to a limited understanding of how oxygen isotopes are influenced during uranium processing. This study explores oxygen isotope exchange and fractionation between magnesium diuranate (MDU), ammonium diuranate (ADU), and uranyl fluoride (UO2F2) with steam (water vapor) during their reduction to UOx. The MDU was precipitated from two water sources, one enriched and one depleted in 18O. The UO2F2 was precipitated from a single water source and either directly reduced or converted to ADU prior to reduction. All MDU, ADU, and UO2F2 were reduced to UOx in a 10% hydrogen/90% nitrogen atmosphere that was dry or included steam. Powder X-ray diffraction (p-XRD) was used to verify the composition of materials after reduction as mixtures of primarily U3O8, U4O9, and UO2 with trace magnesium and fluorine phases in UOx from MDU and UO2F2, respectively. The bulk oxygen isotope composition of UOx from MDU was analyzed using fluorination to remove the lattice-bound oxygen, and then O2 was subsequently analyzed with isotope ratio mass spectrometry (IRMS). The oxygen isotope compositions of the ADU, UO2F2, and the resulting UOx were analyzed by large geometry secondary ion mass spectrometry (LG-SIMS). When reduced with steam, the MDU, ADU, and UO2F2 experienced significant oxygen isotope exchange, and the resulting δ18O values of UOx approached the values of the steam. When reduced without steam, the δ18O values of converted ADU, U3O8, and UOx products remained similar to those of the UO2F2 starting material. LG-SIMS isotope mapping of F impurity abundances and distributions showed that direct steam-assisted reduction from UO2F2 significantly removed F impurities while dry reduction from UO2F2 led to the formation of UOx that was enhanced in F impurities. In addition, when UO2F2 was processed via precipitation to ADU and calcination to U3O8, F impurities were largely removed, and reductions to UOx with and without steam each had low F impurities. Overall, these findings show promise for combining multiple signatures to predict the process history during the conversion of uranium ore concentrates to nuclear fuel.

2.
ACS Omega ; 7(4): 3462-3469, 2022 Feb 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35128255

RESUMEN

The incorporation of oxygen isotopes from water into uranium oxides during industrial processing presents a pathway for determining a material's geographical origin. This study is founded on the hypothesis that oxygen isotopes from atmospheric water vapor will exchange with isotopes of oxygen in solid uranium oxides during thermal processing or calcination. Using a commonly encountered oxide, U3O8, the exchange kinetics and equilibrium fractionation with water vapor (in a concentration range of 50-55% relative humidity) were investigated using processing temperatures of 400, 600, and 800 °C. In an atmosphere containing only water vapor diluted in N2, oxygen isotope equilibration in U3O8 occurred within 12 h at 400 °C and within 2 h at 600 and 800 °C. Fractionation factors (1000lnα, U3O8-H2O) between the water and oxide were -12.1, -11.0, and -8.0 at 400, 600, and 800 °C, respectively. With both humidity and O2 present in the calcining atmosphere, isotopic equilibration is attained within 2 h at and above 400 °C. In this mixed atmosphere, which was designed to emulate Earth's troposphere, isotopes are incorporated preferentially from water vapor at 400 °C and from O2 at 600 and 800 °C. Rapid and temperature/species-dependent isotope exchange also elucidated the impact of retrograde exchange in humid air, showing a shift from O2-dependent to H2O-dependent fractionation as U3O8 cooled from 800 °C. These results confirm that uranium oxides inherit oxygen isotopes from humidity during thermal processing, illuminating an important mechanism in the formation of this forensic signature.

3.
ACS Omega ; 6(45): 30856-30864, 2021 Nov 16.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34805714

RESUMEN

Oxygen stable isotopes in uranium oxides processed through the nuclear fuel cycle may have the potential to provide information about a material's origin and processing history. However, a more thorough understanding of the fractionating processes governing the formation of signatures in real-world samples is still needed. In this study, laboratory synthesis of uranium oxides modeled after industrial nuclear fuel fabrication was performed to follow the isotope fractionation during thermal decomposition and reduction of ammonium diuranate (ADU). Synthesis of ADU occurred using a gaseous NH3 route, followed by thermal decomposition in a dry nitrogen atmosphere at 400, 600, and 800 °C. The kinetic impact of heating ramp rates on isotope effects was explored by ramping to each decomposition temperature at 2, 20, and 200 °C min-1. In addition, ADU was reduced using direct (ramped to 600 °C in a hydrogen atmosphere) and indirect (thermally decomposed to U3O8 at 600 °C, then exposed to a hydrogen atmosphere) routes. The bulk oxygen isotope composition of ADU (δ18O = -16 ± 1‰) was very closely related to precipitation water (δ18O = -15.6‰). The solid products of thermal decomposition using ramp rates of 2 and 20 °C min-1 had statistically indistinguishable oxygen isotope compositions at each decomposition temperature, with increasing δ18O values in the transition from ADU to UO3 at 400 °C (δ18OUO3 - δ18OADU = 12.3‰) and the transition from UO3 to U3O8 at 600 °C (δ18OU3O8 - δ18OUO3 = 2.8‰). An enrichment of 18O attributable to water volatilization was observed in the low temperature (400 °C) product of thermal decomposition using a 200 °C min-1 ramp rate (δ18OUO3 - δ18OADU = 9.2‰). Above 400 °C, no additional fractionation was observed as UO3 decomposed to U3O8 with the rapid heating rate. Indirect reduction of ADU produced UO2 with a δ18O value 19.1‰ greater than the precipitate and 4.0‰ greater than the intermediate U3O8. Direct reduction of ADU at 600 °C in a hydrogen atmosphere resulted in the production of U4O9 with a δ18O value 17.1‰ greater than the precipitate. Except when a 200 °C min-1 ramp rate is employed, the results of both thermal decomposition and reduction show a consistent preferential enrichment of 18O as oxygen is removed from the original precipitate. Hence, the calcination and reduction reactions leading to the production of UO2 will yield unique oxygen isotope fractionations based on process parameters including heating rate and decomposition temperature.

4.
Talanta ; 226: 122096, 2021 May 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33676653

RESUMEN

Hydrated secondary mineralization readily forms on the surface of UO2 particles exposed to humidity in an oxidizing environment. The oxygen stable isotope composition of the secondary uranium oxide may reflect that of the water vapor, as well as the hydrogen and oxygen stable isotopic composition of the mineral hydration water. The geospatial organization of δ2H and δ18O values of atmospheric humidity and precipitation is increasingly well understood, which suggests that the hydrogen and oxygen stable isotopes in secondary mineral hydration water may yield information on the environment in which the mineralization formed. UO2 powders were exposed to air with constant 30%, 61%, and 91% relative humidity, and constant H and O stable isotope composition. Aliquots were sampled from the UO2 materials at intervals of 1-10 days through the total humidity exposure duration of 180 days. Scanning electron microscopy, transmission electron microscopy, and x-ray diffraction analysis of the humidity-exposed UO2 indicates that schoepite/metaschoepite [(UO3)•2H2O] secondary phases had formed on the underlying UO2. The δ2H and δ18O values of mineral hydration waters were determined by thermogravimetry-enabled isotope ratio infrared spectroscopy (TGA-IRIS). Results indicate that hydrogen in the surface sorbed and mineral hydration waters is exchangeable and thus their δ2H values are difficult to interpret. However, oxygen in these waters is less exchangeable, and thus the oxygen stable isotope composition of the schoepite/metaschoepite hydration water is likely to be related to that of the exposure water vapor. After formation of schoepite/metaschoepite, the δ18O values of the hydration water in schoepite/metaschoepite does not change in response to changes in exposure vapor δ18O values, which suggests that the δ18O values of the hydration water is relatively durable. These findings suggest that information about the origin and storage history of a UO2 sample may be discernable from δ18O values of schoepite/metaschoepite hydration water.

5.
Rapid Commun Mass Spectrom ; 33(1): 89-96, 2019 Jan 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30325553

RESUMEN

RATIONALE: Water vapor exposure experiments have applications for studying water physisorption and chemisorption hydration and hydroxylation reactions on a wide variety of material surfaces. The stable isotopes of hydrogen and oxygen in the water molecule are useful tracers of water exchange mechanisms and/or rates in such vapor exposure experiments. METHODS: We designed and built a humidity chamber system that uses membrane-mediated liquid-vapor exchange of water followed by mixing with dry air to control the relative humidity of air and its δ2 H and δ18 O isotopic composition. We tested the stability and precision of the humidity and its isotopic composition on hourly to 90-day timescales. RESULTS: The humidity chamber design reported here is capable of providing relative humidity control to within ±1%, and consistent δ2 H and δ18 O values of the water vapor that are similar to our cavity ringdown spectroscopy (CRDS) measurement precision (δ2 Hvap ± 0.7‰ and δ18 Ovap ± 0.24‰). We quantify the isotopic enrichment effects of Rayleigh distillation in the system and provide information on water reservoir sizes large enough to buffer isotopic enrichment effects to within measurement precision. CONCLUSIONS: The humidity chamber design reported here provides a means to create constant δ2 H and δ18 O values over the course of an exposure experiment. The design has applications to a wide range of studies of water sorption on material surfaces from foods and pharmaceuticals to geological materials.

6.
Oecologia ; 187(4): 1025-1039, 2018 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29955987

RESUMEN

Stable isotope ratios of H and O are widely used to identify the source of water, e.g., in aquifers, river runoff, soils, plant xylem, and plant-based beverages. In situations where the sampled water is partially evaporated, its isotope values will have evolved along an evaporation line (EL) in δ2H/δ18O space, and back-correction along the EL to its intersection with a meteoric water line (MWL) has been used to estimate the source water's isotope ratios. Here, we review the theory underlying isotopic estimation of source water for evaporated samples (iSWE). We note potential for bias from a commonly used regression-based approach for EL slope estimation and suggest that a model-based approach may be preferable if assumptions of the regression approach are not valid. We then introduce a mathematical framework that eliminates the need to explicitly estimate the EL-MWL intersection, simplifying iSWE analysis and facilitating more rigorous uncertainty estimation. We apply this approach to data from the US EPA's 2007 National Lakes Assessment. We find that data for most lakes are consistent with a water source similar to annual runoff, estimated from monthly precipitation and evaporation within the lake basin. Strong evidence for both summer- and winter-biased sources exists, however, with winter bias pervasive in most snow-prone regions. The new analytical framework should improve the rigor of iSWE in ecohydrology and related sciences, and our initial results from US lakes suggest that previous interpretations of lakes as unbiased isotope integrators may only be valid in certain climate regimes.


Asunto(s)
Agua Subterránea , Ríos , Lagos , Isótopos de Oxígeno , Nieve
7.
Rapid Commun Mass Spectrom ; 31(1): 75-84, 2017 Jan 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27766702

RESUMEN

RATIONALE: The fast and accurate measurement of H and O stable isotope compositions (δ2 H and δ18 O values) of soil and sediment pore water remains an impediment to scaling-up the application of these isotopes in soil and vadose hydrology. Here we describe a method and its calibration to measuring soil and sediment pore water δ2 H and δ18 O values using a water vapor-permeable probe coupled to an isotope ratio infrared spectroscopy analyzer. METHODS: We compare the water vapor probe method with a vapor direct equilibration method, and vacuum extraction with liquid water analysis. At a series of four study sites in a managed desert agroecosystem in the eastern Great Basin of North America, we use the water vapor probe to measure soil depth profiles of δ2 H and δ18 O values. RESULTS: We demonstrate the accuracy of the method to be equivalent to direct headspace equilibration and vacuum extraction techniques, with increased ease of use in its application, and with analysis throughput rates greater than 7 h-1 . The soil depth H and O stable isotope profiles show that soil properties such as contrasting soil texture and pedogenic soil horizons control the shape of the isotope profiles, which are reflective of local evaporation conditions within the soils. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that this water vapor probe method has potential to yield large numbers of H and O stable isotope analyses of soil and sediment waters within shorter timeframes and with increased ease than with currently existing methods. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

8.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 113(4): 919-24, 2016 Jan 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26755592

RESUMEN

Our understanding of climatic conditions, and therefore forcing factors, in North America during the past two glacial cycles is limited in part by the scarcity of long, well-dated, continuous paleoclimate records. Here, we present the first, to our knowledge, continuous, millennial-resolution paleoclimate proxy record derived from millimeter-thick pedogenic carbonate clast coatings (pedothems), which are widely distributed in semiarid to arid regions worldwide. Our new multiisotope pedothem record from the Wind River Basin in Wyoming confirms a previously hypothesized period of increased transport of Gulf of Mexico moisture northward into the continental interior from 70,000 to 55,000 years ago based on oxygen and carbon isotopes determined by ion microprobe and uranium isotopes and U-Th dating by laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry. This pronounced meridional moisture transport, which contrasts with the dominant zonal transport of Pacific moisture into the North American interior by westerly winds before and after 70,000-55,000 years ago, may have resulted from a persistent anticyclone developed above the North American ice sheet during Marine Isotope Stage 4. We conclude that pedothems, when analyzed using microanalytical techniques, can provide high-resolution paleoclimate records that may open new avenues into understanding past terrestrial climates in regions where paleoclimate records are not otherwise available. When pedothem paleoclimate records are combined with existing records they will add complimentary soil-based perspectives on paleoclimate conditions.

SELECCIÓN DE REFERENCIAS
DETALLE DE LA BÚSQUEDA
...