Abstract

Laboratory experimentation has indicated that the SREX process is effective for partitioning 90Sr from acidic radioactive waste solutions located at the Idaho Chemical Processing Plant. A baseline flowsheet has been proposed for the treatment of sodiumbearing waste (SBW) which includes extraction of strontium from liquid SBW into the SREX solvent (0.15 M 4′,4′ (5′)-di-(tert-butyldicyclohexo)-18-crown-6 and 1.2 M TBP in Isopar L®), a 0.01 M nitric acid strip section to back-extract components from the loaded solvent, and a 2.0 M HNO3 solvent acidification section to equilibrate the solvent with HNO3 prior to recycle to the extraction section. The flowsheet was designed to provide a decontamination factor (DF) of >103 which will reduce the 90Sr activity in the waste solution to below the NRC Class A LLW limit of 0.04 Ci 90Sr/m3. SREX flowsheet testing was performed using sixteen stages of 5.5-cm diameter centrifugal contactors. The behavior of stable Sr and other components which are potentially extracted by the SREX solvent were evaluated. Specifically, the behavior of the matrix components including Pb, K, Hg, Na, Ca, Zr, and Fe was studied. The described flowsheet achieved 99.98% Sr removal (DF=4250) with one cycle of SREX. Potassium and Zr were partially extracted into the SREX solvent with 35% and 21%, respectively, exiting in the strip product. Sodium, Ca, and Fe were essentially inextractable. Lead was determined to extract and accumulate in the SREX solvent and in the strip section. As a result, a Pb precipitate formed in the strip stages of the contactors. Mercury was also determined to extract and accumulate in the SREX solvent.

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