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Electrochemical Salt Wasteform Development: A Review of Salt Treatment and Immobilization Options

Brian J. Riley

2020Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research53 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Electrochemical reprocessing, also referred to as pyroprocessing, is a technique for recycling actinides from used nuclear fuel (UNF) to produce fuel for future reactors. Here, UNF is dissolved in a molten salt (e.g., LiCl-KCl eutectic) within an electrorefiner. After UNF dissolution, fission products are released into the electrolyte salt and converted to chlorides. This paper discusses wasteform options for processing the base electrolyte salt with the fission product salts as well as only the rare-earth (RE) fission products (as RECl3, REOCl, or REOx) with the intent of finding optimal methods for reducing total waste salt volumes by partitioning the salt for alternate wasteform options. Two of the more detailed partitioning options discussed herein include halide removal from the salt (dehalogenation), which accounts for more than half of the salt on a molar basis, and RE fission product removal for wasteforms with high-RE loadings. Wasteform properties are compared with emphasis on wasteform volume starting from a given amount of (1) total salt cations or (2) RE cations. Comparisons are also made of wasteform chemical durabilities, with the data available from like testing methods. A main conclusion from this work is the justification of subsequent salt processing after electrorefiner operations for achieving significant wasteform volume reduction.

Topics & Concepts

Salt (chemistry)Fission productsMaterials scienceNuclear fission productActinideSpent nuclear fuelMolten saltMolten salt reactorWaste managementElectrolyteDissolutionEutectic systemRadioactive wasteRadiochemistryNuclear chemistryMetallurgyChemical engineeringChemistryElectrodeEngineeringPhysical chemistryAlloyMolten salt chemistry and electrochemical processesNuclear materials and radiation effectsGraphite, nuclear technology, radiation studies