Structure and Thermochemistry of Perrhenate Sodalite and Mixed Guest Perrhenate/Pertechnetate Sodalite
Author(s) -
Eric M. Pierce,
Kristina Lilova,
D. Missimer,
Wayne W. Lukens,
Lili Wu,
Jeffrey P. Fitts,
Claudia J. Rawn,
Ashfia Huq,
Donovan N. Leonard,
Jeremy R. Eskelsen,
Brian F. Woodfield,
C.M. Jantzen,
Alexandra Navrotsky
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
environmental science and technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.851
H-Index - 397
eISSN - 1520-5851
pISSN - 0013-936X
DOI - 10.1021/acs.est.6b01879
Subject(s) - sodalite , perrhenate , chemistry , thermochemistry , pertechnetate , inorganic chemistry , technetium , rhenium , nuclear chemistry , zeolite , organic chemistry , catalysis
Treatment and immobilization of technetium-99 ( 99 Tc) contained in reprocessed nuclear waste and present in contaminated subsurface systems represents a major environmental challenge. One potential approach to managing this highly mobile and long-lived radionuclide is immobilization into micro- and meso-porous crystalline solids, specifically sodalite. We synthesized and characterized the structure of perrhenate sodalite, Na 8 [AlSiO 4 ] 6 (ReO 4 ) 2 , and the structure of a mixed guest perrhenate/pertechnetate sodalite, Na 8 [AlSiO 4 ] 6 (ReO 4 ) 2-x (TcO 4 ) x . Perrhenate was used as a chemical analogue for pertechnetate. Bulk analyses of each solid confirm a cubic sodalite-type structure (P4̅3n, No. 218 space group) with rhenium and technetium in the 7+ oxidation state. High-resolution nanometer scale characterization measurements provide first-of-a-kind evidence that the ReO 4 - anions are distributed in a periodic array in the sample, nanoscale clustering is not observed, and the ReO 4 - anion occupies the center of the sodalite β-cage in Na 8 [AlSiO 4 ] 6 (ReO 4 ) 2 . We also demonstrate, for the first time, that the TcO 4 - anion can be incorporated into the sodalite structure. Lastly, thermochemistry measurements for the perrhenate sodalite were used to estimate the thermochemistry of pertechnetate sodalite based on a relationship between ionic potential and the enthalpy and Gibbs free energy of formation for previously measured oxyanion-bearing feldspathoid phases. The results collected in this study suggest that micro- and mesoporous crystalline solids maybe viable candidates for the treatment and immobilization of 99 Tc present in reprocessed nuclear waste streams and contaminated subsurface environments.
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