Nuclear wasteMolecule may aid nuclear waste clean-up

Published 14 March 2012

Scientists have produced a previously unseen uranium molecule in a move that could improve clean-up of nuclear waste

Molecules cause radioactive waste to cluster, facilitating cleanup // Source: kokokuxhito.info

Scientists have produced a previously unseen uranium molecule in a move that could improve clean-up of nuclear waste.

The distinctive butterfly-shaped compound is similar to radioactive molecules that scientists had proposed to be key components of nuclear waste. These molecules, however, were thought too unstable to exist for long.

A University of Edinburgh release reports that researchers have shown the compound to be robust, which implies that molecules with a similar structure may be present in radioactive waste.

University of Edinburgh scientists, who carried out the study, say their findings suggest the molecule may play a role in forming clusters of radioactive material in waste.

These are difficult to separate during clean-up. Improving treatment processes for nuclear waste, including targeting this type of molecule, could help the nuclear industry move towards cleaner power generation.

Ideally, all the radioactive materials from spent fuel can be recovered and made safe or used again.

This would reduce the amount of waste and curb risks to the environment.

The Edinburgh team worked in collaboration with scientists in the United States and Canada to verify the structure of the uranium compound.

They made the molecule by reacting a common uranium compound with a nitrogen and carbon-based material. Scientists used chemical and mathematical analyses to confirm the structure of the molecule’s distinctive butterfly shape.

The study, funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council, the EaStCHEM partnership, and the University of Edinburgh, was published in Nature Chemistry.

— Read more in Polly L. Arnold et al., “Strongly coupled binuclear uranium–oxo complexes from uranyl oxo rearrangement and reductive silylation,” Nature Chemistry 4 (21 February 2012): 221–7 ( doi:10.1038/nchem.1270)