Wednesday, August 20, 2008
Analysis of cesium extracting solvent using GCMS and HPLC
Abstract  A high-level waste (HLW) remediation process scheduled to begin in 2007 at the Savannah River Site is the Modular Caustic         Side Solvent Extraction (CSSX) Unit (MCU). The MCU will use a hydrocarbon solvent (diluent) containing a cesium extractant,         a calix[4]arene compound, to extract radioactive cesium from caustic HLW. The resulting decontaminated HLW waste or raffinate         will be processed into grout at the Saltstone Production Facility (SPF). The cesium containing CSSX stream will undergo washing         with dilute nitric acid followed by stripping of the cesium nitrate into a very dilute nitric acid or the strip effluent stream         and the CSSX solvent will be recycled. The Defense Waste Processing Facility (DWPF) will receive the strip effluent stream         and immobilize the cesium into borosilicate glass. Excess CSSX solvent carryover from the MCU creates a potential flammability         problem during DWPF processing. Bench-scale DWPF process testing was performed with simulated waste to determine the fate         of the CSSX solvent components. A simple high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) method was developed to identify the         modifier (which is used to increase Cs extraction and extractant solubility) and extractant within the DWPF process. The diluent         and triocytlamine (which is used to suppress impurity effect and ion-pair disassociation) were determined using gas chromatography         mass spectroscopy (GCMS). To close the organic balance, two types of sample preparation methods were needed. One involved         extracting aqueous samples with methylene chloride or hexane, and the second was capturing the off gas of the DWPF process         using carbon tubes and rinsing the tubes with carbon disulfide for analysis. This paper addresses the development of the analytical         methods and the bench-scale simulated waste study results.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment