RES³T - Rossendorf Expert System for Surface and Sorption Thermodynamics

Paper Details


Bibliographic Data:


Code: BB09b
Paper Type: Article
Author(s): Bradbury MH, Baeyens B
Title: Sorption modelling on illite. Part II: Actinide sorption and linear free energy relationship
Journal: Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
Volume: 73   Year: 2009   Pages: 1004-1113
ISSN-Print: 0016-7037; 0016-1258
Internal Storage: V3646
DOI: 10.1016/j.gca.2008.11.016
Abstract:

Sorption edge data for Ni(II), Co(II), Eu(III) and Sn(IV) [Bradbury M. H. and Baeyens B. (2009) Sorption modelling on illite. Part I: titration measurements and sorption of Ni(II), Co(II), Eu(III) and Sn(IV), Part I] on purified Na-Illite du Puy are available from some previous work, and some new measurements for Am(III), Th(IV), Pa(V) and U(VI) are presented here. All of these sorption edge measurements have been modelled with a 2 site protolysis non-electrostatic surface complexation and cation exchange (2SPNE SC/CE) sorption model for which the site types, site capacities and protolysis constants were fixed [Bradbury M. H. and Baeyens B. (2009), Part I]. In addition, two further data sets for the sorption of Am(III) and Np(V) on Illite du Puy, obtained from the literature, were also modelled in this work. Thus, surface complexation constants for the strong sites in the 2SPNE SC/CE sorption model for nine metals with valence states from II to VI have been obtained. A linear relationship between the logarithm of strong site metal binding constants, SKx−1, and the logarithm of the corresponding aqueous hydrolysis stability constant, OHKx, extending over nearly 35 orders of magnitude is established here for illite for these nine metals. Such correlations are often termed linear free energy relationships (LFER), and although they are quite common in aqueous phase chemistry, they are much less so in surface chemistry, especially over this large range. The LFER for illite could be described by the equation: logSKx-1=7.9±0.4+(0.83±0.02)logOHKx where, “x” is an integer. A similar relationship has been previously obtained for montmorillonite, thus LFERs relating to the sorption on two of the most important clay minerals present in natural systems have been established. Such an LFER approach is an extremely useful tool for estimating surface complexation constants for metals in a chemically consistent manner. It provides a means of obtaining sorption values for radionuclides for which there are no measured values and thus allows gaps in missing sorption data to be filled. An ultimate goal of this approach is to develop a thermodynamic sorption database. This could then be used in radioactive waste management performance assessment studies to calculate sorption in natural systems, and thereby replace the current usage of single solid liquid distribution coefficients (Kd values) to describe radionuclide uptake. Finally, with the data now available, the 2SPNE SC/CE sorption model can be ported into reactive transport models allowing radionuclide migration to be calculated under spatially and temporally changing conditions.

Comment: 2SPNE SC/NE model

Surface Area   |   Site Density / Protolysis   |   Complex Formation   |   Formatted Citation