Abstract

The aim of nuclear facility decommissioning is to make local settlements safe, sustainable and professedly acceptable. The challenges are the clean-up of the nuclear site and waste management. This means a definite promise in terms of safety and security, taking into account social and environmental accountability. There is an essential need to develop safe and efficient methods for nuclear decommissioning. Thus, chemical decontamination technology is of great significance to the decommissioning of nuclear energy facilities. In particular, chemical decontamination technology is applicable to the pipelines and internal loop. The iron-rich oxides, such as Fe3O4 or NiOFe2O3, of a nuclear power plant should have sound decontamination follow-through and should put through a very small amount of secondary waste. It is important to be able to detect and quantify hydrazine in decontamination situations with high sensitivity and selectivity. A colorimetric assay is a technique used to determine the concentration of colored compounds in a solution. However, detecting targeted species rapidly and easily, and with high sensitivity and specificity, is still challenging. Here, the catalytic reaction of oxidants in the p-dimethylaminobenzaldehyde and hydrazine reaction is elucidated. Oxidants can catalyze the reaction of hydrazine and p-dimethylaminobenzaldehyde to form an azine complex such as p-dimethylaminobenzaldazine, with high selectivity and sensitivity within 30 min at ambient temperatures. In the absence of an oxidant such as iron or hydrogen peroxide no detectable colorimetric change was observed by the reaction of p-dimethylaminobenzaldehyde and hydrazine unless an external oxidant was present in the system. In this study, we demonstrated a colorimetric method for the sensitive detection of hydrazine decomposition in the chemical decontamination process. Furthermore, the colorimetric response was easy to monitor with the unaided eye, without any sophisticated instrumentation. This method is thus suitable for on-site detection of contamination in a nuclear facility. In addition, this colorimetric method is convenient, non-invasive, free of complex equipment, and low-cost, making it possible to analyze hydrazine in industrial nuclear facilities. The proposed method was successfully applied to the determination of hydrazine decomposition in the nuclear decontamination process.

Highlights

  • Nuclear science and technology play a pivotal role in bringing innovation, safety, and efficiency to industrial processes

  • A hydrazine-based reductive metal ion decontamination process is being developed to demonstrate its decontamination performance and applicability to the corrosion occurring in the nuclear reactor coolant system and steam generators with iron-rich forms, which is one of the major problems faced in nuclear facilities

  • This study suggested that the pipelines and internal loops of the Fenton/Fenton-like reaction for a colorimetric method could be used for the detection of hydrazine decomposition for chemical decontamination process with surface iron and rust in hydrazine decomposition for chemical decontamination process with surface iron and rust in nuclear nuclear facilities

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Summary

Introduction

Nuclear science and technology play a pivotal role in bringing innovation, safety, and efficiency to industrial processes. Nuclear advances responding to global energy and environmental needs have contributed to the peaceful and sustainable development of the world. There are 435 nuclear reactors in operation around the world [1]. A number of nuclear reactors are operated within well-established nuclear countries with their own supply networks. With the rapid phasing out of fossil fuels, and climate change concerns, many countries are planning to expand existing nuclear power programs, meaning that their resources may be extended. 31 entrant countries are actively preparing for the establishment of a nuclear energy program, with six planning to commission by 2020 and half by 2030 [2]. The domestic and global demand for nuclear decommissioning processes will significantly enhance in this phase, as directly operating nuclear reactors are brought off-line after their life spans end [3]

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