I salute you, Australian Engineers and Scientists!Researchers develop filter for nuclear waste
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September 19, 2008
AUSTRALIAN researchers say they have created a low-cost material to filter and safely store nuclear waste.
The potential breakthrough for the environment was made by a team of scientists from Queensland University of Technology, led by Associate Professor Zhu Huai Yong from the School of Physical and Chemical Sciences.
Prof Zhu said the discovery was particularly important as the world increased its reliance on nuclear energy.
"You have to keep nuclear waste somewhere for hundreds of years," Dr Zhu said.
"Water is used to cool nuclear reactors and during the mining and purification of nuclear material, so waste water is a big problem.
"For example, there is a lake in the United States filled with millions of gallons of nuclear waste water."
But if the waste was stored conventionally in lakes or steel containers, there was a danger it could leak and pollute the land around it.
Professor Zhu said the QUT team had discovered how to create nanofibres, which are millionths of a millimetre in size and can permanently lock away radioactive ions by displacing the existing sodium ions in the fibre.
"We have created ceramic nanofibres which attract and trap radioactive cations (positively charged ions), possibly forever," he said.
"The ceramic material can last a very long time, much longer than the radioactivity of a radioactive ion."
Ceramic was also more chemically stable than metal, could last much longer and was much cheaper to make than steel.
The ceramic nanofibres were made from titanium dioxide, a mineral found abundantly in Australia and used to colour white paint.
The fibres were mixed with caustic soda and heated in a laboratory oven to make the ceramic material.
The nanofibres, which are up to 40 micrometres in length, look like white powder to the human eye, Prof Zhu said.
"The fibres are in very thin layers, less than one nanometre in width, and the radioactive ions are attracted into the space between the layers," he said.
"Once the ceramic material absorbs a certain amount, the layers collapse to lock the radioactive ions inside."
Zor