4.7 Article

Uranyl speciation in sulfate-bearing hydrothermal solutions up to 250 °C

期刊

GEOCHIMICA ET COSMOCHIMICA ACTA
卷 267, 期 -, 页码 75-91

出版社

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.gca.2019.08.027

关键词

Hydrothermal; Uranium; Formation constants; Uranyl-sulfate; Uranium ore-deposits

资金

  1. Laboratory Directed Research and Development program of Los Alamos National Laboratory [20180007DR]
  2. ARC Research Hub on Australian Copper-Uranium - Australian Research Council [IH130200033]
  3. BHP Olympic Dam
  4. South Australian Department of State Development
  5. Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship
  6. OZ Minerals

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The speciation of uranyl in sulfate-bearing solutions at temperatures up to 250 degrees C has been investigated using in situ UV-Visible spectrophotometry. Formation constants for the reactions UO22+ + SO42- double left right arrow UO2SO40 (log beta(1) = 3.38, 4.40, 5.44, 6.33, 7.74) and UO22+ + 2SO(4)(2-) double left right arrow UO2 (SO4)(2)(2-) (log beta(2) = 4.10, 5.26, 6.83, 8.00, 9.70) were derived at 25, 100, 150, 200 and 250 degrees C respectively. These formation constants were fitted to the modified Ryzhenko-Bryzgalin (MRB) model to derive pK(298), A(zz/a) and B(zz/a) values for both complexes: 3.262, 2.212, -197.96 (UO2SO40) and 4.189, 3.21, -473.14 UO2 (SO4)(2)(2-) respectively. Compared with values extrapolated using previously available data for 25, 70 and 75 degrees C, our new data suggest higher stability of UO2SO40 at temperatures above 150 degrees C and significantly lower stability of UO2 (SO4)(2)(2-) at all temperatures above 25 degrees C. Molar absorbances of both sulfate species were also derived. At 25 degrees C we found our molar absorbance for UO2SO40 agreed well with those reported previously in the literature, however we report lower peak amplitudes for UO2 (SO4)(2)(2-). We also noted significant temperature-dependent red shifts in the molar absorbance of UO2SO40. We suggest that these shifts could be explained by changes in sulfate bonding behaviour around the uranyl ion - namely shifts in the distribution of complexes with sulfate bound in either a monodentate or bidentate configuration. Simple models calculated with our new data suggest that sulfate complexes may readily predominate over chloride complexes even in solutions containing upwards of 20 wt% chloride and only 100 ppm sulfate. In addition, moderate concentrations of sulfate (similar to 1 wt%) can increase the solubility of uranium by an order of magnitude. Thus we suggest that sulfate could play an important role in mobilising uranium in hydrothermal systems, and that the removal of sulfate via precipitation of sulfate minerals may act as a means of depositing uranium under oxidizing conditions. This in turn might explain the associations between sulfate minerals and uranium mineralisation occasionally seen in large uranium ore deposits such as Olympic Dam and MacArthur River. (C) 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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