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Safe waste storage

Posted September 29, 2008 1:05 PM

From The Engineer:

Thanks to a team of Queensland University of Technology academics, radioactive waste may no longer be dangerous to store. The team, led by associate professor Zhu Huai Yong from the School of Physical and Chemical Sciences, has created a material that has the potential to filter and safely lock away radioactive ions from waste water. Zhu said effective measures to prevent radioactive contamination of the environment are greatly needed, as the world increases its reliance on nuclear energy. He 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 US filled with millions of gallons of nuclear waste water. However, if waste is stored conventionally in lakes or steel containers, it may leak and pollute the land around it.' Zhu said the team has discovered how to create nanofibres that are millionths of a millimetre in size and could permanently lock away radioactive cations by displacing the existing sodium ions in the fibre.

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Guru
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#1

Re: Safe waste storage

09/30/2008 3:30 PM

I'm not so sure about the "permanently lock away" claim, but if the nanofibers can sequester radioactive ions long enough to effect removal from the water they are in, it would be a big plus. I await further developments.

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#2

Re: Safe waste storage

10/02/2008 9:09 PM

There are already many scientists around the world who are extremely concerned about the growth of nano-fibres and nano-particles.

It appears that these tiny bits have ways of escaping from where they were put.

So eventually those nano-particles, along with their payload od radioactive material, are going to enter us all, via air, food, water, skin etc.

Kind Regards....

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