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Influences of additives on the fate of uranium during coal co-combustion process: The significant activation by CaCO3
- Source :
- Fuel. 287:119421
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- Elsevier BV, 2021.
-
Abstract
- High-efficiency extraction of uranium (U) is a key to determining the feasibility of radioactive hazards reducing and nuclear resources supplementing. So in this study, the influences of additives on U extraction during combustion were shown via Tessier extraction procedures and leaching tests. By co-firing U-rich coal with alkali metal-bearing, alkaline earth-bearing, and transition metal-bearing additives, the proportions of active U are decreasing, increasing, and ambiguous, respectively, among which CaCO3 displays the most remarkable improvement on U extraction. Thus, combining aqueous experiments with some characterizations (e.g., X-ray diffraction, scanning electron microscopy-energy dispersive spectroscopy), the fates of U during combustion with/without CaCO3 were comparatively studied as the roles of times (0–120 min), temperatures (450–1050 °C), and CaCO3 dosages (0–30%). Changes mainly include three points as co-firing time rising: 1) the oxidation of organics is suppressive in the CO2 atmosphere (owing to CaCO3 thermolysis), so U ions strongly associating with organics cannot turn into UOX at times ≤12 min; 2) the favorable captures of acidic phases, including UOx, by CaO promote the generation of uranate and its redistribution in alkaline eutectics; 3) although the former changes stabilize the existence of active U, iron oxides compete for the capture of UOX, contributing to its encapsulation in acid-insoluble glass. After co-firing with 20% CaCO3 and acid extraction, despite ~23.7% of U remaining in residue, it is promising to extract U by the method here, given a considerable improvement (~22.0%) on U extraction only under 5% CaCO3.
- Subjects :
- Aqueous solution
business.industry
020209 energy
General Chemical Engineering
Organic Chemistry
Thermal decomposition
Inorganic chemistry
Energy Engineering and Power Technology
chemistry.chemical_element
02 engineering and technology
Uranium
Combustion
Alkali metal
Fuel Technology
020401 chemical engineering
chemistry
0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering
Coal
Uranate
Leaching (metallurgy)
0204 chemical engineering
business
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00162361
- Volume :
- 287
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Fuel
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........effc6dbe583ddb5fc8c5d1149ade8042
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fuel.2020.119421