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Pore-scale evaluation of uranyl phosphate precipitation in a model groundwater system

Authors :
Martinus Oostrom
Mark E. Bowden
Hongkyu Yoon
Timothy J. Strathmann
Thomas W. Wietsma
Michael F. Fanizza
Changyong Zhang
Charles J. Werth
Kevin T. Finneran
Nancy J. Hess
Source :
Water Resources Research. 49:874-890
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
American Geophysical Union (AGU), 2013.

Abstract

[1] The abiotic precipitation of uranium (U(VI)) was evaluated in a microfluidic pore network (i.e., micromodel) to assess the efficacy of using a phosphate amendment to immobilize uranium in groundwater. U(VI) was mixed transverse to the direction of flow with hydrogen phosphate (HPO42−), in the presence or absence of calcium (Ca2+) or sulfate (SO42−), in order to identify precipitation rates, morphology and types of minerals formed, and effects of mineral precipitates on pore blockage. Precipitation occurred over the time scale of hours to days. Relative to when only U(VI) and HPO42− were present, precipitation rates were 2.3 times slower when SO42− was present, and 1.4 times faster when Ca2+ was present; larger crystals formed in the presence of SO42−. Raman backscattering spectroscopy and micro-X-ray diffraction results both showed that the only mineral precipitated was chernikovite, UO2HPO4 · 4H2O; energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy results indicate that Ca and S are not incorporated into the chernikovite lattice. A pore-scale model was developed, and simulation results of saturation ratio (SR = Q/Ksp) suggest that chernikovite is the least thermodynamically favored mineral to precipitate (0 105). Fluorescent tracer studies and laser confocal microscopy images showed that densely aggregated precipitates blocked pores and reduced permeability. The results suggest that uranium precipitation with phosphate as chernikovite is rapid on the time scale of remediation for the conditions considered and can block pores, alter fluid flow paths, and potentially limit mixing and precipitation.

Details

ISSN :
00431397
Volume :
49
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Water Resources Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........cc58a2ca7b7e8e902182720652cf2768
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/wrcr.20088