Litcius/Paper detail

Speciation of aluminum phases at the Hanford Site

Amy Westesen, Reid A. Peterson

2021Environmental Progress & Sustainable Energy12 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract Treatment of the tank waste at the Hanford Nuclear Reservation in Washington State is one of the largest environmental challenges facing the world today. Disposition of the insoluble solids poses the greatest hurdle to achieving long‐term stabilization of the tank waste. The single largest component of the insoluble solids is aluminum. An assessment of the characterization of this waste has identified that the aluminum is roughly split into thirds between sodium aluminate, gibbsite, and boehmite mineral phases. The largest single source of aluminum in the Hanford tank farms is associated with the tanks located in the southwest corner of the site. These tanks contain relatively high concentrations of aluminum such that the mass of insoluble solids present could be reduced by up to 90% through caustic leaching of the materials in these tanks. Performing such leaching processes would enable the recovery of waste from several leak‐prone single‐shell tanks in that area.

Topics & Concepts

GibbsiteHanford SiteLeaching (pedology)Waste managementEnvironmental scienceBoehmiteHazardous wasteRadioactive wasteSavannah River SiteAluminiumEnvironmental chemistryMaterials scienceChemistryMetallurgyEngineeringSoil scienceSoil waterBauxite Residue and UtilizationElectrokinetic Soil Remediation TechniquesNuclear materials and radiation effects