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Novel fusion method for direct determination of uranium in ilmenite, rutile, columbite, tantalite, and xenotime minerals by laser induced fluorimetry

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TLDR
In this article, a simple, rapid, effective and eco-friendly decomposition method is developed for the determination of uranium (U) by laser induced fluorimetry (LIF) using the salts of sodium di-hydrogen phosphate (NaH2PO4) and di-sodium hydrogen phosphate(Na2HPO4) for the decomposition and dissolution of refractory, non silicate minerals like ilmenite, rutile, columbite, tantalite, and xenotime.
Abstract
A simple, rapid, effective and eco-friendly decomposition method is developed for the determination of uranium (U) by laser induced fluorimetry (LIF). The salts of sodium di-hydrogen phosphate (NaH2PO4) and di-sodium hydrogen phosphate (Na2HPO4) were used in the ratio of 1:1 (phosphate flux) for the decomposition and dissolution of refractory, non silicate minerals like ilmenite, rutile, columbite, tantalite, and xenotime. The effect of associated matrix elements (Ti, Fe, Nb, Ta, Mn and Y present in the sample) on quenching of uranyl fluorescence was studied. The flux used for the sample decomposition has several advantages. In the reported sample decomposition methods, α-hydroxy acids are used as complexing agents to prevent hydrolysis and to get clear and stable solution. This solution can not be directly used for U determination by LIF as α-hydroxy acids quench uranyl fluorescence, hence separation is required. In the present method no such separation is required. The flux itself acts as fluorescence enhancing reagent and buffer (maintaining the optimum pH of 7.1 ± 0.1). The fused melt of the flux mixture, when disintegrated in water, gives clear and stable solution and has high tolerance for most of inorganic quenchers compared to reported phosphate buffers. Also just by dilution (due to high sensitivity of LIF), the concentration of quenchers could be brought down well within the tolerance limit. The accuracy and precision of the method was evaluated by analyzing Certified Reference Materials (IGS-33 and IGS-34 of Institute of Geological Sciences, UK) and Synthetic Minerals. The accuracy of the data is further evaluated by comparing with standard decomposition methods. The results are well within the experimental error. The RSD of the method is ±10% (n = 6) at 10 ppm level for Ilmenite and for other minerals the RSD of the method is ±5% (n = 6) at 50 ppm level. The method is being routinely applied to various refractory samples received from Rare Metal and Rare Earth Investigations for determination of uranium by laser fluorimetry.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Behavior and determination of titanium dioxide nanoparticles in nitric acid and river water by ICP spectrometry.

TL;DR: This work is a systematic study based on the measurement of TiO2 nanoparticle suspensions, as a model of quasi-insoluble material, by plasma spectrometry, and proposes and evaluates soft sonication, minimizing the sample temperature, and trapping of free radicals.
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Hydrometallurgical Separation of Niobium and Tantalum: A Fundamental Approach

TL;DR: In this paper, a mixture of pure Ta2O5 and NbO5 was dissolved using two different fluxes, namely NH4F·HF and Na2HPO4/NaH2PO4·H2O. Selective precipitation and ion exchange were used as separation techniques.
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Radionuclide distributions in Olympic Dam copper concentrates: The significance of minor hosts, incorporation mechanisms, and the role of mineral surfaces

TL;DR: In this paper, nanoSIMS data for ores and metallurgical products from the Olympic Dam IOCG deposit and associated processing facilities were used for elucidating the mineral-scale deportment of ultra-trace radionuclides throughout the processing circuit at Olympic Dam.
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Non-fluoride dissolution of tantalum and niobium oxides and their separation using ion exchange

TL;DR: In this article, the separation of Ta and Nb in a phosphate matrix using ion exchange chromatography was investigated and the results indicated that Ta was more strongly absorbed but by using a stronger acid concentration of 10 M H 3 PO 4, almost complete recovery was also obtained for Ta.
Journal ArticleDOI

An evolved fluorimetric determination of uranium in rock/mineral sample solutions containing hydrolysable elements such as Nb, Ta, Zr and Ti sequestered by bi-fluoride.

TL;DR: The novelty of the proposed method is that the decomposition mixture (NH4HF2/H2SO4) inhibits the hydrolysis of hydrolysable elements by formation of their soluble fluoro complexes, and the separation of uranium using the complexing agent 2,3-dihydroxynaphthalene is more eco-friendly compared to existing the conventional solvent extraction system using aluminum nitrate as the salting out agent.
References
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Book

Extractive metallurgy of niobium

C. K. Gupta, +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, Niobium properties and applications are discussed and a classification of Purification Techniques, Classification of purification techniques, Pyrovacuum Treatment, Electrorefining, Iodide Refining, Zone Refining and Chemical Gettering are presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rapid laser fluorometric method for the determination of uranium in soil, ultrabasic rock, plant ash, coal fly ash and red mud samples

TL;DR: A simple and rapid laser fluorometric determination of trace and ultra trace level of uranium in a wide variety of low uranium content materials like soil, basic and ultra basic rocks, plant ash, coal fly ash and red mud samples is described in this article.
Journal Article

Application of solvent extraction and acid hydrolysis of Nb/Ta separation methods for the determination of uranium in geological materials, Nb/Ta-type samples, and leach liquors by ICP-OES

TL;DR: In this article, two methods for the separation and estimation of uranium using solvent extraction for geological materials of silicate matrix, yellow cakes, and leach liquor-type samples and acid hydrolysis for Nb/Ta-bearing samples by inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry (ICP-OES).
Journal Article

ICP-OES Determination of Nb, Ta, Ti, Fe, Mn, W, and Sn in Columbite and Tantalite Minerals After Decomposition and Dissolution With a Novel Flux and Complexing Agent

TL;DR: In this article, a novel flux and complexing agent for the rapid decomposition and dissolution of columbite and tantalite (Nb -Ta) minerals is described, where the sample is fused with a 1:1 mixture of sodium dihydrogen phosphate and disodium hydrogen phosphate in a platinum crucible.
Journal ArticleDOI

A novel rapid method for preparation of sample solution for chemical characterisation of titanium minerals by atomic spectrometry.

TL;DR: The novelty of the proposed sample decomposition lies in its simplicity, ease and speed of fusion with minimal skills besides being eco-friendly unlike the reported tedious complicated decomposition procedures involving variety of fluxes and lot of hazardous chemicals.
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