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Evaluation of Hydrogen Isotope Exchange Methodology on Adsorbents for Tritium Removal

Gregg A. Morgan, S. Xin Xiao

Fusion Science and Technology / Volume 67 / Number 3 / April 2015 / Pages 487-490

Proceedings of TRITIUM 2013 / dx.doi.org/10.13182/FST14-T61

First Online Publication:March 6, 2015
Updated:April 2, 2015

The Savannah River National Laboratory has demonstrated a potential process that can be used to remove tritium from tritiated water using Pt-catalyzed molecular sieves. The process is an elemental isotope exchange process in which H2 (when flowed through the molecular sieves) will exchange with the adsorbed water, D2O, leaving H2O adsorbed on the molecular sieves. Various formulations of catalyzed molecular sieve material were prepared using two different techniques, Pt-implantation and Pt-ion exchange. This technology has been demonstrated for a protium (H) and deuterium (D) system, but can also be used for the removal of tritium from contaminated water (T2O, HTO, and DTO) using D2 (or H2).