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Investigation of reactor graphite processing with the carbon-14 retention.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 February 2011
Abstract
The system C – Al – TiO2 has been demonstrated to be a strong candidate for the processing of irradiated reactor graphite waste with the retention of biologic hazardous carbon-14 in chemically and thermal stable corundum-carbide ceramics. The corundum-carbide ceramics is obtained from the powdered precursors blend through self-sustaining thermochemical reactions. Investigations of the system C – Al – TiO2 were carried out both theoretically and experimentally. The refining thermodynamic calculations of the phase composition of resulting end product were performed for a wide variety of components content in the system being investigated. Aluminium oxycarbides production was taken into account in the calculations. Thermodynamic functions of aluminium oxycarbides Al4O4C and Al2OC have been calculated for this purpose using currently available literature evidences and own assessments of missing data. On the basis of thermodynamic simulation the proportions of the source substances were determined, which result in the aluminium oxycarbides production. These simulation results have been supported by XRD-analysis of produced specimens. The experimental processing of reactor graphite was conducted by the use of self-sustaining reactions in C – Al – TiO2 powder blends. Test specimens were produced by mass ranging from 0.1 to 3 kg in the argon atmosphere. Various techniques were used to characterize the produced specimens. The compressive strength of specimens of corundum-carbide matrices produced ranges from 7 to 13 MPa. The leaching rates of Cs-137 and Sr-90 from specimens ranged between 10-4 and 10-5 g/(cm2.day) respectively. The carry-over of the carbon combined in carbon monoxide from the reacting mixtures during exothermic process may run up to 1% wt. that appropriates roughly to less than 0.01% wt. of the carbon-14 in the irradiated reactor graphite.
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- Copyright © Materials Research Society 2003
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