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The morphologies and compositions of depleted uranium particles from an environmental case-study

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posted on 2010-01-04, 14:58 authored by Nicholas Selwyn Lloyd, J. F. W. Mosselmans, Randall R. Parrish, Simon R. N. Chenery, Sarah V. Hainsworth, S. J. Kemp
Uraniferous particles from contaminated environmental samples were analysed by scanning electron microscopy with energy dispersive X-ray analysis (SEM-EDXA) and microfocus extended X-ray absorption fine structure (μEXAFS) spectroscopy. The particles of interest are uranium oxides, which were released into the environment by the combustion of scrap depleted uranium (DU) metal at a factory in Colonie, New York, USA. Most of the identified particles appear to have primary, 'as emitted' morphologies; some have evidence of minor dissolution, including corrosion pitting. Polycrystalline and often hollow microscopic spheres were identified, which are similar to particles produced by DU munitions impacting armoured targets. They are attributed to the autothermic oxidation of melt droplets. The compositions of the analysed spheres are dominated by UO2+x with variable amounts of U3O8, two of the least soluble and least bioaccessible phases of U. These particles, collected from dusts and soils, have survived more than 25 y in the terrestrial environment. This study further supports the case for using Colonie as an analogue for battlefield DU contamination.

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Citation

Mineralogical Magazine, 2009, 73 (3), pp. 495-510.

Published in

Mineralogical Magazine

Publisher

Mineralogical Society

issn

0026-461X

Copyright date

2009

Available date

2010-01-04

Publisher version

http://minmag.geoscienceworld.org/content/73/3/495

Language

en

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