Chemical durability and corrosion-induced microstructure evolution of compositionally complex titanate pyrochlore waste forms with uranium incorporation

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Abstract

Chemical durability of compositionally-complex rare-earth titanate pyrochlore solid solutions with or without uranium incorporation was investigated by semi-dynamic leaching testing. A Ti-enriched amorphous passivation film formed on the surface due to the surface alteration-reorganization mechanism with preferential release of the weakly oxygen-bonded rare earth elements. Elemental release was found to be strongly correlated with chemical disorder, with a negligible correlation with entropy. The release rate of the uranium gradually decreased with increasing numbers of components, implying a possibility of designing and optimizing waste form performance with enhanced chemical durability by controlling composition complexity and chemical disorder for effective nuclear waste management.

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Yang, K., Bryce, K., Yao, T., Zhao, D., & Lian, J. (2024). Chemical durability and corrosion-induced microstructure evolution of compositionally complex titanate pyrochlore waste forms with uranium incorporation. Journal of the European Ceramic Society, 44(2), 1102–1114. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jeurceramsoc.2023.09.071

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