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Transport of low molecular weight organic compounds in compacted illite and kaolinite.

Authors :
Chen, Yanhua
Glaus, Martin A.
Van Loon, Luc R.
Mäder, Urs
Source :
Chemosphere. May2018, Vol. 198, p226-237. 12p.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

14 C-containing dissolved organic compounds may significantly contribute to the calculated annual overall dose emanated from a deep geological repository for radioactive waste. To date, there is a general lack of knowledge concerning the transport behaviour of low molecular weight organic compounds in the geosphere. The present work is aiming at a generic approach to measure weak adsorption of such compounds onto selected clay minerals. Percolation experiments were employed to sensitively measure the retardation of low molecular weight carboxylates and alcohols in compacted illite and kaolinite as a function of the ionic strength. Detection limits of ∼10 −5  m 3  kg −1 for the involved sorption distribution coefficients were attained thereby. The adsorption of alcohols on clays was near the detection limit and assumed to occur predominately via H-bonding. The adsorption of organic anions was influenced by several factors such as molecular structure, type of clay surfaces and the chemical composition of the aqueous phase. It was found that the relative position of neighbouring hydroxyl groups strongly influenced the retardation behaviour. Alpha-hydroxylated carboxylates, such as lactate, were found to be most retarded. Ligand exchange at the edge aluminol sites is the most probable explanation for the uptake of the negatively charged organic test compounds by the clay surface. The breakthrough behaviour of organic anions was additionally impacted by anion exclusion in illite. The demonstrated weak retardation of the test compounds can be robustly introduced in transport models, leading thus to a much lower contribution of 14 C to the expected long-term overall dose. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00456535
Volume :
198
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Chemosphere
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
128166636
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2018.01.137