SummaryThe primary objective of this study is to summarize the laboratory investigations performed to evaluate short-and long-term effects of phosphate treatment on uranium leaching from 300 Area smear zone sediments. Column studies were used to compare uranium leaching in phosphate-treated to untreated sediments over a year with multiple stop flow events to evaluate longevity of the uranium leaching rate and mass. Phosphate treatment may decrease leaching by non-uranium calcium-phosphate precipitates coating uranium surface phases, uranium adsorption to precipitates, or slow formation of uranium-phosphate precipitates. A secondary objective was to compare polyphosphate injection, polyphosphate/xanthan injection, and polyphosphate infiltration technologies that deliver phosphate to sediment.Although phosphate treatment did not completely eliminate uranium leaching from sediment, the long-term decrease in leaching rate, leached mass, and changes in nonlabile uranium were significant compared with untreated sediment. Under idealized laboratory conditions, a wide range of phosphate treatments resulted in a significant (average 54%) long-term (to 1 year) decrease in leached uranium mass.A comparison of a high phosphate treatment to no treatment over a time period of 4500 h shows the evolution of phosphate-treated sediment from initial high efficiency to remove uranium from solution to decreased efficiency over a long period of time. The injection strategy for polyphosphate treatment of sediments that resulted in the greatest decrease in uranium leaching was to: a) maximize the no-flow phosphate-sediment reaction time before groundwater advection, b) use a high (~50 mM) phosphate concentration, and c) use xanthan with the polyphosphate solution. Some limitations of polyphosphate treatment technologies were identified, which impact field-scale applicability in different treatment zones. Because the rate at which uranium is removed from solution in the presence of phosphate precipitates is slow, the phosphate treatment will be most effective in low flow zones (i.e., smear zone where groundwater flow occurs only seasonally). Although xanthan addition (to increase solution viscosity and improve access to low-K zones) to polyphosphate showed the greatest consistent decrease in leached uranium, viscosity decreases rapidly (half-life 52 h). Because the high viscosity of the solution needs to be maintained for weeks in order to have sufficient phosphate-sediment contact in a potential smear zone application, additional research is needed. The mass of phosphate precipitate needed to decrease uranium leaching is significant, although polyphosphate and polyphosphate/xanthan injections precipitated sufficient mass (0.18 to 0.28 mg PO 4 /g). While polyphosphate solution infiltration resulted in significantly greater precipitate mass, further optimization of an infiltration strategy is needed to precipitate sufficient phosphate at 20-25 ft depth needed for field scale use. Given field-scale spatial/ temporal variation in uranium c...