Abstract
There would be a possibility of uranium contamination around the nuclear power plants and the underground waste disposal sites, where the uranium could further migrate and diffuse to some distant places by groundwater. It is necessary to understand the biogeochemical behaviors of uranium in underground environments to effectively control the migration and diffusion of uranium. In general, various kinds of microbes are living in soils and geological media where the activity of microbes may be closely connected with the redox reaction of nuclides resulting in the changes of their solubility. We investigated the adsorption and precipitation behaviors of dissolved uranium on some solid materials using hydrogen gas as an electron donor instead of organic matters. Although the effect of hydrogen gas did not appear in a batch experiment that used granite as a solid material, there occurred a reduction of uranium concentration by 5~8% due to hydrogen in an experiment using bentonite. This result indicates that some indigenous bacteria in the bentonite that have utilized hydrogen as the electron donor affected the behavior (reduction) of uranium. In addition, the bentonite bacteria have showed their strong tolerance against a given high temperature and radioactivity of a specific waste environment, suggesting that the nuclearbiogeochemical reaction may be one of main mechanisms if the natural bentonite is used as a buffer material for the disposal site in the future.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Lee, S. Y., Lee, J. K., Seo, H. J., & Baik, M. H. (2018). Biogeochemical effects of hydrogen gas on the behaviors of adsorption and precipitation of groundwater-dissolved uranium. Economic and Environmental Geology, 51(2), 77–85. https://doi.org/10.9719/EEG.2018.51.2.77
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.