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SCIENCE
INDEX
2000
2001
2002
Chemistry
Imaging apparatus
characterizes drops in 'dirty' laboratory environments
Jim
Kloeppel, Physical Sciences Editor
(217) 244-1073; kloeppel@uiuc.edu
9/18/02
CHAMPAIGN,
Ill. A high-fidelity spectrometric system for studying the behavior
of drops and particles in industrial flame reactors has been constructed
by researchers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in
collaboration with researchers at the University of Arizona. The instrument
was used to study the potential of thermal combustors for reducing the
volume of liquid nuclear wastes for safe, long-term storage.
Vitrification of radioactive waste into glassy solids is the most popular
approach for disposal. By spraying radioactive sludge into a high-temperature
combustor, essentially all the water and other nonradioactive material
could be removed, leaving only the radioactive metallic elements to
be vitrified for burial. Under optimized conditions, up to 99.99 percent
of the metal ions in a waste stream can be scavenged in the combustor.
"That kind of efficiency would be great for most applications,
but its not good enough when dealing with radioactive waste,"
said Alexander Scheeline, a professor of chemistry at Illinois. "Understanding
the cause of the unscavenged fraction and devising a way to reduce it
are essential if thermal processing is to be used for nuclear waste
treatment."
One possible explanation is that large "rogue" drops are responsible
for the unscavenged metals, Scheeline said. These drops do not pass
through the hottest zones in the combustor, resulting in only partial
vaporization.
To investigate the role of rogue drops in this process, Scheeline and
his colleagues --Illinois postdoctoral researcher Jerry Cabalo, Arizona
professor and head of chemical and environmental engineering Jost Wendt,
and Arizona graduate student John Schmidt -- developed an optical system
to monitor drop sizes and trajectories at very high spatial resolutions.
"In the thermal waste destruction process, small particle formation
is also very important," Scheeline said. "Metals released
into the gas phase readily form small particles, so it was crucial that
this system also have the capability of detecting small soot particles."
In operation, large drops of water or diesel fuel were injected into
the furnace. An excimer laser sent a beam into the combustor, illuminating
a plane through which the drops passed. The scattered light was then
passed to a CCD (charge-coupled device) camera and analyzed.
In contrast to optical monitoring of typical combustion experiments
performed in a reasonably clean environment, "these measurements
took place in a coal combustion laboratory at the University of Arizona,"
Scheeline said. "Coal dust from experiments and sand from the desert
were all-too-frequent visitors."
To protect delicate optical components, the researchers covered the
optical system with plastic panels and pumped clean, dry air into the
enclosure. "Despite months of experiments on coal dust combustion
taking place in the laboratory -- which left a thick layer of dust on
the outside of the spectrograph and on the plastic housing -- the optical
path remained free of dust and other contaminants," Scheeline said.
In their initial studies, the researchers demonstrated that the optical
system could track large drops and the resulting soot particles through
the flame. "To get these drops to break up and vaporize, we need
a longer combustion zone, or we need to spray finer drops," Scheeline
said.
The same kind of optical measurements and combustion research is relevant
to designing cleaner-running automobile engines, studying combustion
processes in rocket engines, and developing alternative means for solid
waste disposal.
The researchers describe their instrumentation and experiments in the
October issue of Applied Spectroscopy. The U.S. Department of Energy
supported this work.
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