Evaporative evolution of a Na–Cl–NO3–K–Ca–SO4–Mg–Si brine at 95°C: Experiments and modeling relevant to Yucca Mountain, Nevada
Autor: | Susan A. Carroll, Maureen Alai, Mark Sutton |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2005 |
Předmět: |
lcsh:GE1-350
Anhydrite Aqueous solution Chemistry Brucite Analytical chemistry engineering.material lcsh:Chemistry chemistry.chemical_compound Bassanite lcsh:QD1-999 Geochemistry and Petrology Environmental chemistry engineering Halite Solubility Sulfate Nitratine lcsh:Environmental sciences Research Article |
Zdroj: | Geochemical Transactions, Vol 6, Iss 2, p 31 (2005) Geochemical Transactions |
ISSN: | 1467-4866 |
Popis: | A synthetic Topopah Spring Tuff water representative of one type of pore water at Yucca Mountain, NV was evaporated at 95°C in a series of experiments to determine the geochemical controls for brines that may form on, and possibly impact upon the long-term integrity of waste containers and drip shields at the designated high-level, nuclear-waste repository. Solution chemistry, condensed vapor chemistry, and precipitate mineralogy were used to identify important chemical divides and to validate geochemical calculations of evaporating water chemistry using a high temperature Pitzer thermodynamic database. The water evolved toward a complex "sulfate type" brine that contained about 45 mol % Na, 40 mol % Cl, 9 mol % NO3, 5 mol % K, and less than 1 mol % each of SO4, Ca, Mg, ∑CO2(aq), F, and Si. All measured ions in the condensed vapor phase were below detection limits. The mineral precipitates identified were halite, anhydrite, bassanite, niter, and nitratine. Trends in the solution composition and identification of CaSO4 solids suggest that fluorite, carbonate, sulfate, and magnesium-silicate precipitation control the aqueous solution composition of sulfate type waters by removing fluoride, calcium, and magnesium during the early stages of evaporation. In most cases, the high temperature Pitzer database, used by EQ3/6 geochemical code, sufficiently predicts water composition and mineral precipitation during evaporation. Predicted solution compositions are generally within a factor of 2 of the experimental values. The model predicts that sepiolite, bassanite, amorphous silica, calcite, halite, and brucite are the solubility controlling mineral phases. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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