Abstract

The impact of calcium on the solubility and redox behavior of the Pu(IV)-EDTA system was investigated using a combination of undersaturation solubility studies and advanced spectroscopic techniques. Batch solubility experiments were conducted in 0.1 M NaCl-NaOH-HCl-EDTA-CaCl2 solutions at constant [EDTA] = 1∙10−3 M, 1 ≤ pHm ≤ 11, and 1∙10−3 M ≤ [CaCl2] ≤ 2∙10−2 M. Additional samples targeted brine systems represented by 3.5 M CaCl2 and WIPP simulated brine. Redox conditions were buffered with hydroquinone (pe + pH ≈ 9.5) with selected samples prepared in the absence of any redox buffer. All experiments were performed at T = 22 °C under Ar atmosphere. In-situ X-ray absorption spectroscopy indicated that PuO2(ncr,hyd) was the solubility-controlling phase during the lifetime of all experiments and that aqueous plutonium was present in the +IV oxidation state across all experimental conditions except at pHm ≈ 1, where a small fraction of Pu(III) was also identified. Current thermodynamic models overestimate Pu(IV)-EDTA solubility in the absence of calcium by approximately 1–1.5 log10-units and do not describe the nearly pH-independent, increased solubility observed with increased calcium concentrations. The ternary Pu(IV)-OH-EDTA system without calcium was reevaluated using solubility data obtained in this work and reported in the literature. An updated thermodynamic model including the complexes Pu(OH)(EDTA)−, Pu(OH)2(EDTA)2−, and Pu(OH)3(EDTA)3− was derived. Solubility data collected in the presence of calcium follows a pH-independent trend (log m(Pu)tot vs. pHm), which can only be explained by assuming the formation of a quaternary complex, tentatively defined as CaPu(OH)4(EDTA)2−, in solution. The significant enhancement of plutonium solubility observed in the investigated brine systems supports the formation of a quaternary complex that is not outcompeted by Ca(EDTA)2−, even in concentrated CaCl2 solutions. Although the exact stoichiometry of the complex may need to be revisited, this new quaternary complex has a pronounced impact on plutonium predominance diagrams over a broad range of pH, pe, and calcium concentrations that are relevant to nuclear waste disposal.

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