Abstract

Genetic models for the formation of uranium deposits almost invariably invoke the reduction of U(VI) to U(IV) as the deposition mechanism. However, the questions of when and how this reduction occurred are often not clear in most uranium deposits. For example, mineralization in the giant Olympic Dam Cu-U-Au-Ag deposit (Australia) occurs mainly in hematite-rich breccias of the oxidizing hematite-quartz-barite assemblage. Similarly, unconformity-related uranium deposits in the Athabasca Basin (Canada) are accompanied by extensive and intensive hematite- and quartz-rich alteration halos, pointing to a possible linkage between uranium mineralization and silicification. However, this linkage is not understood due to the lack of knowledge about the speciation and mechanism of uranium incorporation in microcrystalline and macrocrystalline silicas. In this contribution, microcrystalline silicas (agate and opal-CT) containing 27–137 ppm U have been investigated by microbeam synchrotron X-ray fluorescence mapping, microbeam synchrotron X-ray diffraction analysis, synchrotron X-ray absorption spectroscopy, Raman spectroscopy, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. These data unravel the binding mechanism of uranyl silicate complexes in microcrystalline silicas and suggest a new mechanism of uranium deposition involving uranyl co-precipitation without the putative reduction process, providing a potential missing link between uranium mineralization and silicification for the formation of uranium deposits. In addition, new data on the uptake and long-term retention of elevated uranyl contents in microcrystalline silicas extend previous findings from their amorphous counterparts on these materials as an effective sink for uranium attenuation to higher temperatures, important to the storage and disposal of heat-generating nuclear waste in deep geological repositories.

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