[ RadSafe ] Bob Cherry on pyrophoric uranium munitions
James Salsman
james at bovik.org
Wed Apr 13 04:08:55 CEST 2005
John R Johnson wrote:
> [Uranium] cannot form a nitrate (ICRP Type F) unless it get into
> solution with NO(sub3).
Although that could possibly be considered a valid a priori hypothesis
for those unfamiliar with uranium chemistry, it is contrary to both:
A. the established observation of uranyl ion in an enclosed uranium
burn by B. Salbu, et al.:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvrad.2004.04.001
B. the known chemistry of uranium, e.g., quoting Simon Cotton in
_Lanthanides and Actinides_ (New York: Oxford University Press,
1991) page 126: "Aerial oxidation of any uranium compound
eventually results in the formation of a uranyl compound." See
also: S. P. McGlynn and J. K. Smith, J. Mol. Spectrosc. 6 (1961)
164; R. G. Denning, et al., Mol. Phys., 37 (1979) 1109; W. R. Wadt,
J. Amer. Chem. Soc., 103 (1981) 6053; P. Pyykko et al., Inorg.
Chem., 28 (1989) 1801.
>... a major risk from exposure to soluble uranium is kidney damage, and there
> are many drinking water source with uranium concentrations that will result
> in kidney burdens above those possible from inhaled UNO(sub3).
What is UNO3? I can find no mention of such compound in Gmelin or
any other uranium reference in the Stanford chemistry library. Do
you mean to write UO2(NO3)2?
Sincerely,
James Salsman
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