Extraction of uranium from seawater : design and testing of a symbiotic system
Extraction of uranium from seawater : design and testing of a symbiotic system
Date
2017-06
Authors
Haji, Maha N.
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DOI
10.1575/1912/9160
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Abstract
Seawater is estimated to contain 4.5 billion tonnes of uranium, approximately 1000
times that available in conventional terrestrial resources. Finding a sustainable way
to harvest uranium from seawater will provide a source of nuclear fuel for generations
to come, while also giving all countries with ocean access a stable supply. This will
also eliminate the need to store spent fuel for potential future reprocessing, thereby
addressing nuclear proliferation issues as well. While extraction of uranium from
seawater has been researched for decades, no economical, robust, ocean-deployable
method of uranium collection has been presented to date. This thesis presents a symbiotic approach to ocean harvesting of uranium where a common structure supports a
wind turbine and a device to harvest uranium from seawater. The Symbiotic Machine
for Ocean uRanium Extraction (SMORE) created and tested decouples the function
of absorbing uranium from the function of deploying the absorbent which enables a
more efficient absorbent to be developed by chemists.
The initial SMORE concept involves an adsorbent device that is cycled through
the seawater beneath the turbine and through an elution plant located on a platform
above the sea surface. This design allows for more frequent harvesting, reduced down-
time, and a reduction in the recovery costs of the adsorbent. Specifically, the design
decouples the mechanical and chemical requirements of the device through a hard,
permeable outer shell containing uranium adsorbing fibers. This system is designed
to be used with the 5-MW NREL OC3-Hywind
floating spar wind turbine.
To optimize the decoupling of the chemical and mechanical requirements using
the shell enclosures for the uranium adsorbing fibers, an initial design analysis of the
enclosures is presented. Moreover, a
flume experiment using filtered, temperature-
controlled seawater was developed to determine the effect that the shells have on
the uptake of the uranium by the fibers they enclose. For this experiment, the AI8
amidoxime-based adsorbent fiber developed by Oak Ridge National Laboratory was
used, which is a hollow-gear-shaped, high surface area polyethylene fiber prepared by
radiation-induced graft polymerization of the amidoxime ligand and a vinylphosphonic acid comonomer.
The results of the
flume experiment were then used to inform the design and
fabrication of two 1/10th physical scale SMORE prototypes for ocean testing. The AI8 adsorbent fibers were tested in two shell designs on both a stationary and a
moving system during a nine-week ocean trial, with the latter allowing the effect of
additional water
flow on the adsorbents uranium uptake to be investigated. A novel
method using the measurement of radium extracted onto MnO2 impregnated acrylic
fibers to quantify the volume of water passing through the shells of the two systems
was utilized.
The effect of a full-scale uranium harvesting system on the hydrodynamics of an
offshore wind turbine were then investigated using a 1/150th Froude scale wave tank
test. These experiments compared the measured excitation forces and responses of
two versions of SMORE to those of an unmodified
floating wind turbine.
With insights from the experiments on what a final full-scale design might look
like, a cost-analysis was performed to determine the overall uranium production cost
from a SMORE device. In this analysis, the capital, operating, and decommissioning
costs were calculated and summed using discounted cash
ow techniques similar to
those used in previous economic models of the uranium adsorbent.
Major contributions of this thesis include fundamental design tools for the development and evaluation of symbiotic systems to harvest uranium or other minerals
from seawater. These tools will allow others to design offshore uranium harvesting
systems based on the adsorbent properties and the scale of the intended installation.
These
flexible tools can be tuned for a particular adsorbent, location, and installation
size, thereby allowing this technology to spread broadly.
Description
Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
June 2017
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Citation
Haji, M. N. (2017). Extraction of uranium from seawater : design and testing of a symbiotic system [Doctoral thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution]. Woods Hole Open Access Server. https://doi.org/10.1575/1912/9160