Corrosion and transport of depleted uranium in sand-rich environments

Stephanie Handley-Sidhu, Nick D. Bryan, Paul J. Worsfold, David J. Vaughan, Francis R. Livens, Miranda J. Keith-Roach, Nicholas Bryan

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    The firing of depleted uranium (DU) weapons during conflicts and military testing has resulted in the deposition of DU in a variety of sand-rich environments. In this study, DU-amended dune sand microcosm and column experiments were carried out to investigate the corrosion of DU and the transport of corrosion products. Under field-moist conditions, DU corroded to metaschoepite ((UO2)8O2(OH)12·(H2O)10) at a rate of 0.10 ± 0.012 g cm-2 y-1. This loosely bound corrosion product detached easily from the coupon and became distributed heterogeneously within the sand. The corrosion of DU caused significant changes in the geochemical environment, with NO3- and Fe(III) reduction observed. Column experiments showed that transport of metaschoepite was mainly dependent on its dissolution and the subsequent interaction of the resulting dissolved uranyl (UO22 +) species with sand particles. The modelling results predict that the transport of U released from metaschoepite dissolution is retarded, due to a slowly desorbing surface species (first order desorption rate constant = 5.0 (±1.0) × 10-8 s-1). The concentrations of U eluting from the metaschoepite column were orders of magnitude higher than the World Health Organisation's recommended maximum admissible concentration for U in drinking water of 15 μg L-1. Therefore, a relatively high level of mobile U contamination would be expected in the immediate proximity of a corroding penetrator in a sand-rich environment. © 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)1434-1439
    Number of pages5
    JournalChemosphere
    Volume77
    Issue number10
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Nov 2009

    Keywords

    • Corrosion
    • Depleted uranium (DU)
    • Metaschoepite
    • Transport
    • Uranyl

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