Effects of boric acid on volatile tellurium in severe accident conditions
Journal article, 2024

Boric acid is used in light-water nuclear reactors to control the reactor and is expected to be present as part of the chemistry of a severe accident. Therefore, its influence on other prominent species expected in an accident must be investigated. One such species is tellurium. In the present study, tellurium is volatized, and boric acid is dissolved and injected into the system as a means of studying the interaction between it and tellurium. The experiments were evaluated with ICP-MS and XPS. Results suggest that while there is no direct interaction, boric acid still affects the tendency for tellurium to oxidize. In general, less oxidation was detected in the presence of boric acid than in its absence, especially at high temperatures. The species formed upon oxidation was determined to be TeO2. Since tellurium metal is more volatile than TeO2, this may have implication in a wider severe accident context.

Fission product

Severe accidents

Tellurium

Boric acid

XPS

Author

Fredrik Börjesson Sandén

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Energy and Material

Anna-Elina Pasi

Technical Research Centre of Finland (VTT)

T. Karkela

Technical Research Centre of Finland (VTT)

Tuula Kajolinna

Technical Research Centre of Finland (VTT)

Christian Ekberg

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Energy and Material

Annals of Nuclear Energy

0306-4549 (ISSN) 1873-2100 (eISSN)

Vol. 200 110412

Subject Categories

Other Chemistry Topics

DOI

10.1016/j.anucene.2024.110412

More information

Latest update

3/1/2024 8