Issue 41, 2021, Issue in Progress

A high throughput computational investigation of the solid solution mechanisms of actinides and lanthanides in zirconolite

Abstract

In this work, we perform a theoretical investigation of the actinide and lanthanide solid solution mechanisms of zirconolite-2M, prototypically CaZrTi2O7, as a candidate immobilisation matrix for plutonium. Solid solution energies were calculated using static atomistic simulations by means of the General Utility Lattice Program, for formulations of relevance to ceramic wasteform deployment, with substitution on the Ca2+ and Zr4+ sites by Ce4+, Pu4+, Th4+, and U4+, and appropriate charge balance by substitution of Al3+ or Fe3+ on Ti4+ sites. In simple solid solutions involving substitution on the Zr4+ site, we found that whereas substitution of Ce4+, U4+ and Pu4+ were energetically favoured, substitution of Th4+ was not energetically favoured. For more complex solid solutions involving Ce4+, Pu4+, Th4+, and U4+ substitution on the Ca2+ site, we found the most energetically favoured scheme involved co-substitution of Al3+ or Fe3+ on the five-fold co-ordinate Ti4+ site in the zirconolite-2M structure. Comparison of these computational data with experimental evidence, where available, demonstrated broad agreement. Consequently, this study provides useful insight into formulation design and the efficacy of Ce4+, U4+ and Th4+ as Pu4+ surrogates in zirconolite-2M ceramic wasteforms for plutonium disposition.

Graphical abstract: A high throughput computational investigation of the solid solution mechanisms of actinides and lanthanides in zirconolite

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
14 Apr 2021
Accepted
14 Jul 2021
First published
20 Jul 2021
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

RSC Adv., 2021,11, 25179-25186

A high throughput computational investigation of the solid solution mechanisms of actinides and lanthanides in zirconolite

S. Dimosthenous, C. M. Handley, L. R. Blackburn, C. L. Freeman and N. C. Hyatt, RSC Adv., 2021, 11, 25179 DOI: 10.1039/D1RA02914B

This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence. You can use material from this article in other publications without requesting further permissions from the RSC, provided that the correct acknowledgement is given.

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