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The development of a method for the simultaneous measurement of cerium (iv) and chromium (vi) species in nitric acid media

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

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The development of a method for the simultaneous measurement of cerium (iv) and chromium (vi) species in nitric acid media. / Nickson, Ian D.; Boxall, Colin; Jackson, Angela et al.
ASME 12th International Conference on Environmental Remediation and Radioactive Waste Management (ICEM09): Volume 1: Low/Intermediate-Level Waste Management; Spent Fuel, Fissile, Transuranic, High-Level Waste Management. NEW YORK: AMER SOC MECHANICAL ENGINEERS, 2010. p. 163-169.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

Harvard

Nickson, ID, Boxall, C, Jackson, A & Whillock, GOH 2010, The development of a method for the simultaneous measurement of cerium (iv) and chromium (vi) species in nitric acid media. in ASME 12th International Conference on Environmental Remediation and Radioactive Waste Management (ICEM09): Volume 1: Low/Intermediate-Level Waste Management; Spent Fuel, Fissile, Transuranic, High-Level Waste Management. AMER SOC MECHANICAL ENGINEERS, NEW YORK, pp. 163-169. https://doi.org/10.1115/ICEM2009-16124

APA

Nickson, I. D., Boxall, C., Jackson, A., & Whillock, G. O. H. (2010). The development of a method for the simultaneous measurement of cerium (iv) and chromium (vi) species in nitric acid media. In ASME 12th International Conference on Environmental Remediation and Radioactive Waste Management (ICEM09): Volume 1: Low/Intermediate-Level Waste Management; Spent Fuel, Fissile, Transuranic, High-Level Waste Management (pp. 163-169). AMER SOC MECHANICAL ENGINEERS. https://doi.org/10.1115/ICEM2009-16124

Vancouver

Nickson ID, Boxall C, Jackson A, Whillock GOH. The development of a method for the simultaneous measurement of cerium (iv) and chromium (vi) species in nitric acid media. In ASME 12th International Conference on Environmental Remediation and Radioactive Waste Management (ICEM09): Volume 1: Low/Intermediate-Level Waste Management; Spent Fuel, Fissile, Transuranic, High-Level Waste Management. NEW YORK: AMER SOC MECHANICAL ENGINEERS. 2010. p. 163-169 doi: 10.1115/ICEM2009-16124

Author

Nickson, Ian D. ; Boxall, Colin ; Jackson, Angela et al. / The development of a method for the simultaneous measurement of cerium (iv) and chromium (vi) species in nitric acid media. ASME 12th International Conference on Environmental Remediation and Radioactive Waste Management (ICEM09): Volume 1: Low/Intermediate-Level Waste Management; Spent Fuel, Fissile, Transuranic, High-Level Waste Management. NEW YORK : AMER SOC MECHANICAL ENGINEERS, 2010. pp. 163-169

Bibtex

@inproceedings{b2079f6a959e4f9e8559c059e4f2171f,
title = "The development of a method for the simultaneous measurement of cerium (iv) and chromium (vi) species in nitric acid media",
abstract = "The corrosion of stainless steel in nitric acid media is a major concern for the nuclear industry. Several reprocessing schemes such as PUREX (Plutonium Uranium Reduction Extraction) and UREX (Uranium Reduction Extraction) utilise nitric acid media, and an understanding of the behaviour of key chemical species in these process streams is vital if their effect on associated corrosion reactions and their rates is to be accurately assessed and quantified. This will allow for more accurate prediction of the working lifetime of any stainless steel surface in contact with the process stream in question. Two such key species that are found in nuclear process streams are cerium as Ce (IV) and chromium as Cr(VI), both of which may act as corrosion accelerants. The redox chemistry of cerium and chromium in highly active liquor (HAL) will depend on nitrous acid concentration, temperature, acidity, total nitrate and possibly the influence of other dissolved species and hence an analytical technique for the on-line measurement of these quantities would be useful for lifetime prediction and corrosion prevention. As a result of this, a strategy for the simultaneous measurement of both Ce(IV) and Cr(VI) species in the presence of other ions typically found in process streams (such as Iron, Magnesium Neodymium and Aluminium) has been developed. The work presented will discuss the design and implementation of the electrochemical techniques that we have used in the development of this strategy and in the measurement of the species in question.",
keywords = "STAINLESS-STEEL DECONTAMINATION, CORROSION PROCESS, OZONE",
author = "Nickson, {Ian D.} and Colin Boxall and Angela Jackson and Whillock, {Guy O. H.}",
year = "2010",
month = dec,
day = "12",
doi = "10.1115/ICEM2009-16124",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-0-7918-4407-6",
pages = "163--169",
booktitle = "ASME 12th International Conference on Environmental Remediation and Radioactive Waste Management (ICEM09)",
publisher = "AMER SOC MECHANICAL ENGINEERS",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - The development of a method for the simultaneous measurement of cerium (iv) and chromium (vi) species in nitric acid media

AU - Nickson, Ian D.

AU - Boxall, Colin

AU - Jackson, Angela

AU - Whillock, Guy O. H.

PY - 2010/12/12

Y1 - 2010/12/12

N2 - The corrosion of stainless steel in nitric acid media is a major concern for the nuclear industry. Several reprocessing schemes such as PUREX (Plutonium Uranium Reduction Extraction) and UREX (Uranium Reduction Extraction) utilise nitric acid media, and an understanding of the behaviour of key chemical species in these process streams is vital if their effect on associated corrosion reactions and their rates is to be accurately assessed and quantified. This will allow for more accurate prediction of the working lifetime of any stainless steel surface in contact with the process stream in question. Two such key species that are found in nuclear process streams are cerium as Ce (IV) and chromium as Cr(VI), both of which may act as corrosion accelerants. The redox chemistry of cerium and chromium in highly active liquor (HAL) will depend on nitrous acid concentration, temperature, acidity, total nitrate and possibly the influence of other dissolved species and hence an analytical technique for the on-line measurement of these quantities would be useful for lifetime prediction and corrosion prevention. As a result of this, a strategy for the simultaneous measurement of both Ce(IV) and Cr(VI) species in the presence of other ions typically found in process streams (such as Iron, Magnesium Neodymium and Aluminium) has been developed. The work presented will discuss the design and implementation of the electrochemical techniques that we have used in the development of this strategy and in the measurement of the species in question.

AB - The corrosion of stainless steel in nitric acid media is a major concern for the nuclear industry. Several reprocessing schemes such as PUREX (Plutonium Uranium Reduction Extraction) and UREX (Uranium Reduction Extraction) utilise nitric acid media, and an understanding of the behaviour of key chemical species in these process streams is vital if their effect on associated corrosion reactions and their rates is to be accurately assessed and quantified. This will allow for more accurate prediction of the working lifetime of any stainless steel surface in contact with the process stream in question. Two such key species that are found in nuclear process streams are cerium as Ce (IV) and chromium as Cr(VI), both of which may act as corrosion accelerants. The redox chemistry of cerium and chromium in highly active liquor (HAL) will depend on nitrous acid concentration, temperature, acidity, total nitrate and possibly the influence of other dissolved species and hence an analytical technique for the on-line measurement of these quantities would be useful for lifetime prediction and corrosion prevention. As a result of this, a strategy for the simultaneous measurement of both Ce(IV) and Cr(VI) species in the presence of other ions typically found in process streams (such as Iron, Magnesium Neodymium and Aluminium) has been developed. The work presented will discuss the design and implementation of the electrochemical techniques that we have used in the development of this strategy and in the measurement of the species in question.

KW - STAINLESS-STEEL DECONTAMINATION

KW - CORROSION PROCESS

KW - OZONE

U2 - 10.1115/ICEM2009-16124

DO - 10.1115/ICEM2009-16124

M3 - Conference contribution/Paper

SN - 978-0-7918-4407-6

SP - 163

EP - 169

BT - ASME 12th International Conference on Environmental Remediation and Radioactive Waste Management (ICEM09)

PB - AMER SOC MECHANICAL ENGINEERS

CY - NEW YORK

ER -