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New
study doubts zircon ceramics for long-term nuclear waste
By
Ana
Fernandez
AFP
PARIS
Petroleumworld.com 01 11 07
Zircon ceramics, proposed as a solution for the headache of plutonium
waste, would be swiftly degraded by radioactive bombardment, scientists
have learnt.
More than five decades after the first commercial nuclear reactor began
generating power, waste stockpiles have reached the point where numerous
countries are pushing ahead with multi-billion-dollar plans for long-term
storage of this hazard.
Their biggest problem is highly radioactive waste, especially plutonium,
which has to be stored for tens of thousands, even hundreds of thousands
of years before it can be deemed safe.
As plutonium decays, it emits alpha particles, which are high-energy
particles that wack into the atoms that make up the container structure.
The structure's neat atomic order is jostled, eventually compromising
its strength.
Synthetic zircon has emerged as a leading proposed contender for storing
high-level waste, because zircon, as a crystal, is able to contain naturally-occurring
uranium for millions of years.
Scientists at the University of Cambridge in Britain used nuclear magnetic
resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, a technique to assess the atomic structure
of materials, to see how natural zircon coped with exposure to plutonium
239.
They had expected each alpha particle to jostle between 1,000 and 2,000
zircon atoms, but the tests showed that in fact 5,000 were displaced.
On this basis, a synthetic zircon container could start leaking radioactivity
after only 1,400 years, they calculate.
"This time is very short in terms of the ideal immobilisation of
plutonium 239 for ... 241,000 years," say the authors, led by Ian
Farnan of the university's Department of Earth Sciences.
The paper appears on Thursday in Nature, the weekly British science
journal.
AFP
10 1800 GMT 01 07
Copyright© 2001 AFP.All
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