Abstract :
Coprecipitation of radionuclides with secondary solids is currently neglected in safety assessments for radioactive waste repositories, although this process is thought to be important in limiting radionuclide solution concentrations. This paper provides a systematic review of laboratory data on metal coprecipitation with calcite, presented in the form of phenomenological partition coefficients. The aim of this investigation is to provide a consistent set of parameter values for the quantitative modelling of radionuclide coprecipitation with calcite, which will be the dominant alteration product in cementitious repositories accessed by carbonate-rich groundwater.
From the data reviewed, empirical correlations have been derived that relate experimentally determined partition coefficients (λMe) to measurable chemical properties of the coprecipitated metals (ionic radii and sorption parameters of the incorporated trace metals, solubility products of the pure metal carbonates). These correlations have then been used to predict the partition coefficients of radionuclides for which no laboratory data exist.
Such predictions indicate that the actinides will partition strongly into calcite under reducing conditions (λMe not, vert, similar200–1000 for trivalent, λMe not, vert, similar20–200 for tetravalent actinides). Nickel(II) incorporation will be moderate (λMe not, vert, similar1–10), while incorporation of ions like U(VI), Cs(I), Sr(II) and Ra(II) in calcite will be weak (λMe<1).
In spite of substantial uncertainties, the estimated partition coefficients are sufficiently accurate to allow a semi-quantitative evaluation of the effect of radionuclide coprecipitation with calcite in limiting radionuclide solution concentrations in well characterised repository environments.