Patent Number: 045405123
Section: description

The radioactive stream containing boric acid which is treated in the process of this invention is an aqueous stream which typically comes from the primary loop of pressurized water reactors. That stream may consist of about 10 to 1,000 ppm of boron, usually as boric acid, and may also contain lithium, calcium, magnesium, aluminum, suspended solids such as metal oxides, and radionuclides such as cobalt and various fission products. The stream is usually heated to evaporate some of the water and concentrate the boric acid to about 4 to about 12%. (All percentages herein are by weight unless otherwise indicated.) In the first step of the process of this invention, the aqueous stream containing the boric acid and radionuclides is evaporated to dryness. This can be accomplished in a spray dryer or other type of evaporator, but it is preferably done in a scraped film evaporator because that is one of the few types of evaporators that will take the stream to complete dryness. The drying should be done at temperatures less than 130.degree. F. to avoid volatilizing the boric acid. Preferably, the evaporation should be done under vacuum at temperatures less than 100.degree. F., which can be easily accomplished in a scraped film evaporator. In the second step of this invention, the solids from the first step are mixed with an alcohol to form a boron alkoxide. The alcohol reacts with the boric acid to form the corresponding boron alkoxide and water according to the equation: EQU 3ROH+H.sub.3 BO.sub.3 .fwdarw.B(OR).sub.3 +3H.sub.2 O, where R is alkyl. The alcohol, in addition to reacting with the boric acid to form a boron alkoxide, also forms an azeotrope with the boron alkoxide. Sufficient alcohol should be added to react with all of the boric acid which is present and form the azeotrope. That is, the amount of alcohol should be at least 1.4 times the stoichiometric reaction amount, and up to about 100 mole % in excess of stoichiometric may be used to ensure complete reaction. The alcohol may be methanol, ethanol, propanol, isopropanol, or a mixture thereof, but methanol is preferred as boron methoxide is the most stable boron alkoxide and it forms the lowest boiling point azeotrope, which reduces its chances of decomposition. If ethanol, propanol, or isopropanol is used, it may be necessary to add benzene or another compound which forms an azeotrope with water in order to remove the water as it is formed. In the next step of this invention, the stream is heated to evaporate the boron alkoxide and the alcohol. If methanol is used, they will evaporate together as a boron alkoxide-alcohol azeotrope. If ethanol, propanol, or isopropanol is used, an alcohol-water azeotrope will evaporate first, followed by the boron alkoxide. The methanol azeotrope is 27% methanol and 73% trimethylborate and the temperature of a stream will be 54.degree. C., the temperature at which the azeotrope evaporates. Evaporation is preferably performed by using steam around the jacket of the reactor. Steam at about 212.degree. to 338.degree. F. in an amount of about 21/2 to 3 pounds of steam per pound of boric acid is suitable if 1.4 times the stoichiometric amount of methanol is used. The material remaining in the bottom of the reactor ("crud") may then be solidified in cement, glass, or other materials, according to processes well known in the art. A relatively new way of solidifying this material is to add alkoxide glass formers which are then partially hydrolyzed and heated to form a polymeric glass. (See U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,376,070; 4,377,507; 4,422,965; and 4,430,257), herein incorporated by reference. In the fourth step of the process of this invention, the vaporized boron alkoxide is mixed with water to reform boric acid according to the equation: EQU B(OR).sub.3 +3H.sub.2 O.fwdarw.3ROH+H.sub.3 BO.sub.3. The amount of water used should be at least stoichiometric, but excess water will not be a disadvantage as the boric acid is mixed with water for reuse in the reactor anyway. Recycled boric acid is typically about a 4% solution. In the fifth step of the process of this invention, the alcohol is separated from the boric acid by evaporation of the alcohol to leave a relatively pure boric acid aqueous solution. This is accomplished by heating the stream at the boiling point of alcohol, which is 64.7.degree. C. for methanol, until all of the alcohol has been removed. Again, a scrapped film evaporator is the preferred apparatus, though other evaporators can also be used. The remaining boric acid can then be recycled into the reactor, if desired. The process of this invention can be conducted continuously, in batch, or a mixture of continuous and batch; batch is preferred as it is easier to control. The following examples more fully illustrate the process of this invention. EXAMPLE 1 FIG. 1 is a block diagram which shows the process of this invention using methanol to form boron methoxide, and using alkoxide glass formers to solidify the solids. In FIG. 1, an aqueous solution containing 12% boric acid and 1% crud passes through line 1 to scraped film evaporator 2, which is heated with steam in line 3 producing clean water in line 4. The solids pass through line 5 to boric acid reactor 6. Methanol enters the reactor in line 7 and steam in line 8 heats the reactor. The azeotrope leaves the reactor in line 9 and the crud leaves in line 10. The azeotrope passes to scraped film evaporator 11 and is mixed with water in line 12. Heat from steam in line 13 evaporates methanol in line 7, leaving clean boric acid in line 14. Meanwhile, the crud in line 10 is mixed with alkoxide glass formers in line 15 in mixer 16. Steam heat from line 17 evaporates the methanol in line 18. The solids then move through line 19 to melter 20, where electrical power is applied (line 21), producing crud solidified in glass in line 22. The following table gives the flow rate, temperature, and material balance in the various lines shown in FIG. 1. __________________________________________________________________________ Stream Number 1 4 5 3 9 10 8 18 17 15 7 19 22 __________________________________________________________________________ Flow Rate (lb/hr) 500 427.8 72.2 427.8 147.6 64.6 174 80.1 79 32.2 140 16.7 16.7 Temperature (.degree.F.) 70 120 120 338 158 158 338 212 338 70 70 212 2022 Component (w/o) H.sub.2 O 87.0 100 10.0 100 0 92.2 100 75.7 100 1.21 0 0 0 H.sub.3 BO.sub.3 12.0 0 83.1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 17.5 17.5 Crud 1.0 0 6.9 0 0 7.78 0 0 0 0 0 30.0 30.0 CH.sub.3 OH 0 0 0 0 31.7 0 0 24.3 0 54.5 100 0 0 SiO.sub.2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 25.6.sup.2 0 49.3 49.3 Na.sub.2 O 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3.39.sup.3 0 6.53 6.53 Al.sub.2 O.sub.3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3.51.sup.4 0 4.43 4.43 B(OCH.sub.3).sub.3 0 0 0 0 68.3 0 0 0 0 11.7 0 0 0 __________________________________________________________________________ Stream 21 -- Electrical Power -- 20 Stream 14 -- 4 w/o H.sub.3 BO.sub.3 in H.sub.2 O -- 1500 Stream 13 -- Steam -- 140 lb/hr Stream 12 -- H.sub.2 O -- 1492.4 Final Volume Reduction -- 105 Final Weight Reduction -- 30 .sup.1 As Al(OH.sub.3) .sup.2 As Si(OCH.sub.3).sub.4 .sup.3 As NaOH .sup.4 As B.sub.2 O.sub.3 EXAMPLE 3 FIG. 2 illustrates a modification of the process shown in FIG. 1 where the solids are encapsulated in cement instead of in glass forming alkoxides. In FIG. 2, crud in line 10 passes instead to cement encapsulation system 24 where water and cement from line 25 are added. The product, crud solidified in cement, leaves by line 26. The following table gives the flow rate, temperature, and material balance for the lines shown in FIG. 2. ______________________________________ Stream Number 10* 25 25 Flow Rate (lb/hr) 19 31.6 50.6 Temperature (.degree.F.) 158 70 70 H.sub.2 O (%) 92.22 0 27.6 Crud (Bottoms) (%) 26.3 0 9.9 B(OCH.sub.3).sub.3 (%) 0 0 0 Cement (%) 0 100 62.5 ______________________________________ *Process #2 removes all H.sub.2 O until the only product is B.sub.2 O.sub.3 Final Weight Reduction 10.1 Final Volume Reduction 26.6