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Abstract viiThese findings indicate that for solids very rich in uranium (≳70 to 80 wt%, dry basis), long-term storage under aerated non-agitated conditions will form a thin metaschoepite crust that is readily broken. The underlying material may compact somewhat with time, but, because little appreciable change in settled solids strength was seen after nearly a year of settling at 51°C in laboratory tests, little increase in strength, beyond that associated with any compaction, is anticipated during lower temperature but longer term storage.The observations from the 28-month settling test with uranium-rich genuine sludge and the studies with the uraninite oxidation suggest that metaschoepite crystal ripening and intergrowth may have been responsible for the uncommon strength found in the genuine sludge. In this case, the presence of relatively high amounts of metaschoepite within the settled solids layer likely was necessary to produce the strong product material. Based on these findings, K Basin sludges rich in metaschoepite [≳70 to 80 wt% U as U(VI), dry basis] may self-cement by Ostwald ripening to produce strong agglomerates similar to the behavior shown by the 96-13 sludge in the 28-month settling tests. Because of the low solubility of UO 2 , similar gains in strength by Ostwald ripening for UO 2 -rich sludge cannot occur. Under 51°C oxygenated conditions, a full KW containerized sludge simulant containing gibbsite, ferrihydrite, mordenite, organic ion exchange resin, Hanford sand, and ~50%/50% UO 2 /UO 3 ·2H 2 O decreased in settled solids volume by about 25% over 106 days while a parallel control test run in the absence of oxygen decreased only about 3%. The volume decrease coincided with the oxidation of UO 2 to UO 3 ·2H 2 O and may have been due to better solids packing or coagulation of non-uranium solids with the crystallizing UO 3 ·2H 2 O. However, even though the KW containerized sludge simulant compacted with time, the strength remained low. Under warm (30±5ºC) semi-oxic conditions, the uraninite in uranium-rich K Basin sludge samples oxidized to metaschoepite and other U(VI) phases after 9 years of hot cell storage (Delegard et al. 2007a).These findings mean that, unlike uraninite-rich sludges that form continuous layers or networks of product metaschoepite upon reaction with oxygen or which already have high metaschoepite concentrations, sludges more dilute in uraninite or metaschoepite likely will be unable to produce continuous metaschoepite layers that inhibit further oxidation or which self-cement to form highstrength agglomerates. Instead, the metaschoepite may act to coagulate non-uranium sludge solids and produce settled solids that are more tightly packed ...