Facile and Efficient Decontamination of Thorium from Rare Earths Based on Selective Selenite Crystallization

The coexistence of radioactive contaminants (e.g., thorium, uranium, and their daughters) in rare earth minerals introduces significant environmental, economic, and technological hurdles in modern rare earth production. Efficient, low cost, and green decontamination strategies are therefore desired...

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Published inInorganic chemistry Vol. 57; no. 4; pp. 1880 - 1887
Main Authors Wang, Yaxing, Lu, Huangjie, Dai, Xing, Duan, Tao, Bai, Xiaojing, Cai, Yawen, Yin, Xuemiao, Chen, Lanhua, Diwu, Juan, Du, Shiyu, Zhou, Ruhong, Chai, Zhifang, Albrecht-Schmitt, Thomas E, Liu, Ning, Wang, Shuao
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States American Chemical Society 19.02.2018
American Chemical Society (ACS)
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Summary:The coexistence of radioactive contaminants (e.g., thorium, uranium, and their daughters) in rare earth minerals introduces significant environmental, economic, and technological hurdles in modern rare earth production. Efficient, low cost, and green decontamination strategies are therefore desired to ameliorate this problem. We report here a single-step and quantitative decontamination strategy of thorium from rare earths based on a unique periodic trend in the formation of crystalline selenite compounds across the lanthanide series, where Ce­(III) is fully oxidized in situ to Ce­(IV). This gives rise to a crystallization system that is highly selective to trap tetravalent f-blocks while all other trivalent lanthanides completely remain in solution when coexist. These results are bolstered by first-principles calculations of lattice energies and an examination of bonding in these compounds. This system is contrasted with typical natural and synthetic systems, where trivalent and tetravalent f-block elements often cocrystallize. The separation factors after one round of crystallization were determined from binary systems of Th­(IV)/La­(III), Th­(IV)/Eu­(III), and Th­(IV)/Yb­(III) to reach 2.1 × 105, 1.2 × 105, and 9 × 104, respectively. Selective crystallization of thorium from a simulated monazite composite yields a separation factor of 1.9 × 103 with nearly quantitative removal of thorium.
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content type line 23
SC0016568
USDOE Office of Science (SC), Basic Energy Sciences (BES)
ISSN:0020-1669
1520-510X
DOI:10.1021/acs.inorgchem.7b02681