Abstract

Spectrophotometry was used to study the effect of EDTA on plutonium oxidation state distribution as a function of time, pH, and ligand-to-metal ratio (L/M) under anoxic conditions. Novel Pu(V)-EDTA absorption bands were identified at 571, 993, 1105, and 1150 nm with molar absorption coefficients of 15 ± 1, 6 ± 1, 10 ± 1, and 10 ± 1 cm−1M−1, respectively. Pu(V)-EDTA spectral changes occurred at L/M < 1, indicating only PuVO2(EDTA)3- formed with logK = 3.6 ± 0.3. Time-resolved experiments showed EDTA drastically increased the Pu(V/VI) reduction rate, which we propose is driven by amine lone-pair electron donation and the oxidative decarboxylation of EDTA. Oxidation of Pu(III)-EDTA to Pu(IV)-EDTA occurred on a slower time scale (110–237 days) than previously reported (<15 min) and is hypothesized to be radiolysis driven. Pu(V/VI)-EDTA and Pu(III)-EDTA both approached Pu(IV)-EDTA stabilization over time, yet Pu(V/VI)-EDTA solubility data was ≥ 1.0 log10 units higher than predicted by Pu(IV)-EDTA solubility models, indicating that current thermodynamic models are incomplete. Ultimately, the data show EDTA preferentially stabilizes Pu(IV) over time regardless of initial oxidation state, but Pu(V)-EDTA can persist under environmentally-relevant conditions, emphasizing the need to continue investigating redox reactions, speciation, and behavior of these complexes to support the transuranic waste disposal and surface remediation/containment efforts.

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