Matter News  
Recent News |  Archives |  Tags |  About |  Newsletter |  Submit News |  Links |  Subscribe to MatterNews.com RSS Feed Subscribe

Compound removes radioactive material from power plant waste (3/14/2008)

Tags:
radiation, nuclear energy, nuclear waste

Layered sulfides bond to strontium 90, other radioactive ions

Strontium 90 is a common radioactive by-product of fission in nuclear power plants. When extracted from the reactor along with other isotopes, a mixture is created made up of the radioactive material and inert ions like sodium and calcium.

Scientists at U.S. Department of Energy's Argonne National Laboratory and Northwestern University have developed a compound that captures the radioactive ions so they can be siphoned off and separated from inert material.

"The layered sulfides used work quite well,' scientist Mercouri Kanatzidis said. "We even surprised ourselves."

This mixture is often incredibly acidic or alkaline, making it difficult to find a compound that can survive long enough to extract the strontium and be able to not react with the sodium, which is harmless.

Kanatzidis and colleague Manolis Manos created a synthetic compound made up of sulfides that can survive in the harsh acidic or alkaline climate of the mixture and strips away 99 percent of the strontium 90.

"The material is remarkably simple and can be created in large quantities at a relatively low cost," Kanatzidis said.

The synthetic compound trades its own potassium ions for strontium and can almost completely replace the radioactive element within a few hours.

The next step is to experiment with the compound's ability to siphon away other common radioactive elements like cesium and uranium.

Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by DOE/Argonne National Laboratory

Post Comments:

Search

Recent Articles
Some fundamental interactions of matter turn out to be fundamentally different than thought 7/4/2008

New paper offers insights into 'blinking' phenomena 7/3/2008

Super atoms turn the periodic table upside down 7/2/2008

Physicists create millimeter-sized 'Bohr atom' 7/1/2008

Using a grating with a grade, engineers trap a rainbow 6/30/2008

Quantum computing breakthrough arises from unknown molecule 6/29/2008

Researchers demonstrate super-sensitive explosives detector 6/28/2008

The fight for the best quantum bit (qubit) 6/27/2008

Silicon photonic crystals key to optical cloaking, researchers say 6/26/2008

Physicists Develop 'Impossible' Technique to Study and Develop Superconductors 6/25/2008

A plane with wings of glass? 6/23/2008

A novel X-ray source could be brightest in the world 6/22/2008

Trap and zap: Harnessing the power of light to pattern surfaces on the nanoscale 6/21/2008

Exciton-Based Circuits Eliminate a 'Speed Trap' Between Computing and Communication Signals, Physicists Discover 6/20/2008

Protons partner with neutrons more often than other protons 6/19/2008

  Archives |  Submit News |  Advertise With Us |  Contact Us |  Links
All contents © 2000 - 2009 Web Doodle, LLC. All rights reserved.