Acid generation upon thermal concentration of natural water: The critical water content and the effects of ionic composition |
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Authors: | April L. Pulvirenti Karen M. Needham Mohamad A. Adel-Hadadi Charles R. Marks Jeffrey A. Gorman Donald L. Shettel Aaron Barkatt |
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Affiliation: | aDepartment of Chemistry, The Catholic University of America, Washington, DC 20064, United States;bDominion Engineering Inc., 11730 Plaza America Drive, Suite 310, Reston, VA 20190, United States;cGeosciences Management Institute, 1000 Nevada Way, Suite 106, Boulder City, NV 89005, United States |
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Abstract: | Thermal evaporation of a variety of simulated pore waters from the region of Yucca Mountain, Nevada, produced acidic liquids and gases during the final stages of evaporation. Several simulated pore waters were prepared and then thermally distilled in order to collect and analyze fractions of the evolved vapor. In some cases, distillates collected towards the end of the distillation were highly acidic; in other cases the pH of the distillate remained comparatively unchanged during the course of the distillation. The results suggest that the pH values of the later fractions are determined by the initial composition of the water. Acid production stems from the hydrolysis of magnesium ions, especially at near dryness. Near the end of the distillation, magnesium nitrate and magnesium chloride begin to lose water of hydration, greatly accelerating their thermal decomposition to form acid. Acid formation is promoted further when precipitated calcium carbonate is removed. Specifically, calcium chloride-rich pore waters containing moderate (10–20 ppm) levels of magnesium and nitrate and low levels of bicarbonate produced mixtures of nitric and hydrochloric acid, resulting in a precipitous drop in pH to values of 1 or lower after about 95% of the original volume was distilled. Waters with either low or moderate magnesium content coupled with high levels of bicarbonate produced slightly basic fractions (pH 7–9). If calcium was present in excess of bicarbonate, waters containing moderate levels of magnesium produced acid even in the presence of bicarbonate, due to the precipitation of calcium carbonate. Other salts such as halite and anhydrite promote the segregation of acidic vapors from residual basic solids. The concomitant release of wet acid gas has implications for the integrity of the alloys under consideration for containers at the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste repository. Condensed acid gases at very low pH, especially mixtures of nitric and hydrochloric acid, are capable of corroding even alloys, such as nickel-based Alloy 22, which are considered to be corrosion-resistant under milder conditions. |
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Keywords: | Yucca Mountain Unsaturated zone Hydrolysis Thermal evaporation |
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