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Citation
Tags
HERO ID
4696166
Reference Type
Journal Article
Title
Uranium(V) Incorporation Mechanisms and Stability in Fe(II)/Fe(III) (oxyhydr)Oxides
Author(s)
Roberts, HE; Morris, K; Law, GTW; Mosselmans, JFW; Bots, P; Kvashnina, K; Shaw, S
Year
2017
Is Peer Reviewed?
1
Journal
Environmental Science & Technology Letters
EISSN:
2328-8930
Volume
4
Issue
10
Page Numbers
421-426
DOI
10.1021/acs.estlett.7b00348
Web of Science Id
WOS:000412970700006
Abstract
Understanding interactions between radionuclides and mineral phases underpins site environmental cleanup and waste management in the nuclear industry. The transport and fate of radionuclides in many subsurface environments are controlled by adsorption, redox, and mineral incorporation processes. Interactions of iron (oxyhydr)oxides with uranium have been extensively studied because of the abundance of uranium as an environmental contaminant and the ubiquity of iron (oxyhydr)oxides in engineered and natural environments. Despite this, detailed mechanistic information regarding the incorporation of uranium into Fe(II)-bearing magnetite and green rust is sparse. Here, we present a co-precipitation study in which U(VI) was reacted with environmentally relevant iron(II/III) (oxyhydr)oxide mineral phases. On the basis of diffraction, microscopic, dissolution, and spectroscopic evidence, we show the reduction of U(VI) to U(V) and stabilization of the U(V) by incorporation within the near surface and bulk of the particles during co-precipitation with iron (oxyhydr)oxides. U(V) was stable in both magnetite and green rust structures and incorporated via substitution for octahedrally coordinated Fe in a uranate-like coordination environment. As the Fe(II)/Fe(III) ratio increased, a proportion of U(IV) was also precipitated as surface associated UO2. These novel observations have significant implications for the behavior of uranium within engineered and natural environments.
Tags
IRIS
•
Uranium
Uranium Literature Search Update 7/2018
WOS
•
Uranium Toxicological Review
Date limited literature search 2011-2021
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