Publication | Closed Access
Separations Chemistry for Actinide Elements: Recent Developments and Historical Perspective
113
Citations
26
References
1997
Year
Nuclear Waste ManagementEngineeringRadioactive WasteChemistrySeparations ChemistryMineral ProcessingCold WarActinide SeparationsChemical EngineeringBioremediationSelective SeparationAnalytical ChemistrySeparation TechniqueNuclear MaterialsAdvanced SeparationKey Separations TechniquesInorganic ChemistrySeparation TechnologyCrystallographyWaste ManagementRadioactive Waste DisposalEnvironmental RadiochemistryEnvironmental EngineeringEnvironmental RemediationRadioanalytical Chemistry
Abstract With the end of the cold war, the principal mission in actinide separations has changed from production of plutonium to cleanup of the immense volume of moderately radioactive mixed wastes which resulted from fifty years of processing activities. In order to approach the cleanup task from a proper perspective, it is necessary to understand how the wastes were generated. Most of the key separations techniques central to actinide production were developed in the 40′s and 50′s for the identification and production of actinide elements. Total actinide recovery, lanthanide/actinide separations, and selective partitioning of actinides from inert constitutents are currently of primary concern. To respond to the modern world of actinide separations, new techniques are being developed for separations ranging from analytical methods to detect ultra-trace concentrations (for bioassay and environmental monitoring) to large-scale waste treatment procedures. In this report, the history of actinide separations, both the basic science and production aspects, is examined and evaluated in terms of contemporary priorities.
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