Abstract

A series of simplified glasses were prepared to mimic the United Kingdom's Magnox radioactive waste glasses and determine the separate effect of the presence of Mg on the glass structure and the initial dissolution rate. These glasses had an alkaline earth (Ca/Mg) content of 6.5 mol% and relative ratios of Si, B and Na similar to 25 wt% waste loaded Magnox waste glass simulant. Each simplified glass had similar macroscopic properties, differing only in Ca/Mg ratio. 25Mg magic angle spinning nuclear magnetic resonance (MAS NMR) spectra of the simplified Mg endmember (MgEM) glass (with no Ca) and the full-component simulant glass were similar, consistent with the similar Mg local environments in both glasses. 11B MAS NMR spectra of the series of simplified glasses showed a systematic increase in the amount of three-coordinated boron ([3]B) with increasing amounts of Mg. A clear change in the charge balancing of four-coordinated boron ([4]B) by Mg compared with Ca is observed. However, 11B NMR measurements of the leached material showed that the additional [3]B was not preferentially leached from the Mg containing samples. Despite the structural changes in the glass induced by Ca/Mg substitution, initial dissolution rates (r0) remained invariant, within error, with Ca/Mg ratio. This indicates that the poorer aqueous durability of Mg-containing Magnox waste glass measured experimentally in long-term leaching experiments, compared with SON68 glass containing Ca, is not caused by a primary structural effect in the glass.

Highlights

  • The majority of radioactive waste glass produced in the UK contains magnesium (Mg)

  • This paper describes a separate effect study of the influence of substitution of Mg on the pristine structures and initial dissolution rate of simplified UK Magnox waste glasses

  • As we discovered in this study, the initial dissolution rates as a function of Mg content in these glasses are the same within error

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Summary

Introduction

The majority of radioactive waste glass produced in the UK contains magnesium (Mg). This arises for historical reasons from the Mg-containing alloy cladding used on the natural uranium fuel of the first generation UK Magnox reactors. This Mg is entrained in the fission product fraction following fuel re-processing operations and becomes incorporated into the glass wasteform on vitrification. This paper describes a separate effect study of the influence of substitution of Mg on the pristine structures and initial dissolution rate of simplified UK Magnox waste glasses. As the major structural probe will be NMR (nuclear magnetic resonance), paramagnetic lanthanides have been substituted by lanthanum (La) and iron (Fe) has been left out of the compositional mapping

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