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Superconducting open-gradient magnetic separation for the pretreatment of radioactive or mixed waste vitrification feeds. 1998 annual progress report
Author(s) -
R.D. Doctor,
L. Nuñez,
Charles Crawford,
James A. Ritter,
S. Landsberger
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
osti oai (u.s. department of energy office of scientific and technical information)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/13506
Subject(s) - vitrification , magnetic separation , borosilicate glass , radioactive waste , sorption , materials science , superconducting magnet , environmental remediation , amorphous solid , superconductivity , chemical engineering , waste management , environmental science , chemistry , contamination , adsorption , composite material , nuclear chemistry , nuclear physics , metallurgy , ecology , physics , organic chemistry , quantum mechanics , biology , engineering
'The objective is to reduce the volume and cost of high-level waste glass produced during US DOE remediation activities by demonstrating that magnetic separation can separate crystalline, amorphous, and colloidal constituents in vitrification feed streams known to be deleterious to the production of borosilicate glass. Magnetic separation will add neither chemicals nor generate secondary waste streams. The project includes the systematic study of magnetic interactions of waste constituents under controlled physical and chemical conditions (e.g., hydration, oxidation, temperature) to identify mechanisms that control the magnetic properties. Partitioning of radionuclides to determine their sorption mechanisms is also being studied. The identification of fundamental magnetic properties within the microscopic chemical environment in combination with hydrodynamic and electrodynamic models provides insights into the design of a system for optimal separation. Following this, experimental studies using superconducting open-gradient magnetic separation (OGMS) will be conducted to validate its effectiveness as a pretreatment technique.

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