Hello you all!
At Fukushima dai-ichi, where they used huge amounts of water to cool the reactors, first sea water in open-loop, presently sweet water in closed loop, they have "filters" to remove the radio-caesium from the contaminated water stored on the site, but have left the radio-strontium in this waste water.
Why?
Removing strontium as well would have obvious advantages, since radio-iodine (already decayed), -caesium and -strontium make nearly all the radioactivity in the day-to-millenium time span. Presently the site is filled with tall tanks for this water, which leak in the soil and probably in the Ocean: 300t few days ago, brutally radioactive.
Is strontium any difficult to remove from water? Radio- plus natural together.
Or is it because the operation would remove also other ions like calcium, of which (sea) water would contribute excessive amounts?
And if you see a process usable for thousands of tonnes of water, it should be useful!
A crown-something?
Precipitate the calcium first? In a fractional process if selectivity needs it.
Concentrating this amount of waste water to brine must be possible by reverse osmosis, if it helps.
Removing all or part of the (bi) carbonate, as well.
Thank you!