Abstract. The transport of radionuclides in the environment is a
major problem for the safety assessment of radioactive waste repositories.
Storage in deep geological repositories is considered a safe disposal
strategy because of their ability to isolate hazardous components from the
biosphere for hundreds of thousands of years. Minor actinides (i.e. Am, Cm
and Np) dominate the radiotoxicity of spent nuclear fuel over geological
timescales. In underground repositories, reducing conditions are expected,
and therefore the trivalent oxidation state is dominant for Am and Cm as
well as possibly for Pu. For investigations of the mobility of the trivalent
actinides Am3+ and Cm3+, the less toxic trivalent rare earth
elements, in particular Eu3+, are commonly used. Besides clay and salt, crystalline rock is considered a possible host rock for deep geological repositories. Crystalline rock (e.g. granite) consists mainly of quartz, mica and feldspar. The latter forms common aluminosilicates making up ∼60 vol. % of the earth's crust, but
their sorption behaviour is not well understood, especially for the
Ca-bearing members of the group. Here, we study the sorption of trivalent actinides and their rare earth element homologues on plagioclase which are Ca-bearing feldspars, quantitatively and mechanistically. Zeta potentials of various Ca feldspars show an unexpected increase at pH 4–7, which becomes more pronounced as the amount of Ca in the
crystal lattice increases. This can be interpreted by assuming uptake of
Al3+ and/or the precipitation of an Al phase, where Al originates from
feldspar dissolution at different pH values. Nevertheless, only minor differences were found in the retention and surface speciation of Cm3+ on Ca and K feldspars (Neumann et al., 2021). Ca feldspar has a slightly higher potential to retain trivalent metal ions
compared to K feldspar. An inner-sphere (IS) complex and its two
hydrolysis forms have been identified on both minerals, but the hydrolysis
of the IS complex is stronger in the Ca-rich mineral. A surface complexation model for Ca feldspar was developed by combining the
batch sorption data and the spectroscopically identified surface complexes
to describe the experimental data. These data will be the basis for the
improvement of transport simulations for a reliable safety assessment of
potential radioactive waste repositories in crystalline rock.