P. Lessing, A. Erickson
Dec 1, 2003
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Influential Citations
33
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Journal
Journal of The European Ceramic Society
Abstract
Abstract Hydrated gadolinium phosphate (GdPO 4 ·1H 2 O) was synthesized by reacting high purity dissolved salts (gadolinium nitrates or chlorides) with phosphoric acid. The hydrated powders were shown to be extremely insoluble in water with a K sp measured to be between 2.07 E-14 and 4.76 E-13. Calcination to between 800 and 1000 °C resulted in the formation of GdPO 4 in a monazite (monoclinic) crystal structure. This was correlated with the first exothermic differential thermal analysis (DTA) peak (864.9–883.4 °C). The DTA also showed small peaks in the 1200–1250 °C range, that could be associated with a change from the monazite (monoclinic) crystal structure to the xenotime (tetragonal) crystal structure. However, calcination of a sample to 1400 °C, followed by relatively rapid cooling and XRD, showed the structure was still monazite (monoclinic). DTA results showed a melting point at 1899–1920 °C (endothermic peak). It was therefore concluded that the melting point probably was the melting of the monazite (monoclinic) phase, but may have been xenotime if a phase change at 1200–1250 °C was reversible and very rapid. The higher part of the melting range was achieved with material derived using the slightly higher purity nitrate salt. The results show that GdPO 4 is an excellent candidate for a chemically stable, water-insoluble neutron absorber for inclusion in spent nuclear fuel canisters.