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Diablo Canyon advocacy, Midwest nuclear legislation among April state news items
Pending, passed, and coveted legislation involving nuclear energy made their way across multiple state capitol buildings in the month of April. Here are a few notable updates from California, Iowa, Kentucky, and Missouri.
W. A. Zanotelli, G. L. Silver, W. C. Bowling, S. B. Wells
Nuclear Technology | Volume 17 | Number 1 | January 1973 | Pages 82-84
Technical Note | Chemical Processing | doi.org/10.13182/NT73-A31258
Articles are hosted by Taylor and Francis Online.
Two methods by which molybdenum metal coatings may be removed from plutonium dioxide shards are: (a) fusion of the coated shards in a mixture of potassium nitrate and potassium hydroxide, cooling the melt, and washing the unattacked shards with water; and (b) boiling the shards in an aqueous solution of sodium hypochlorite containing a small amount of mercuric nitrate as a catalyst, and subsequently washing the unattacked shards with water. Both methods remove sufficient molybdenum from the shards (or pellets of compacted shards weighing not more than g each) so the remaining molybdenum does not pose any problems in subsequent nitric acid based recovery operations. The fusion technique generates a smaller volume of liquid waste and does not introduce chlorine into steel recovery facilities.