The interactions between sulfate reducing anaerobic bacteria and plutonium,
with or without bentonite present, were investigated using distribution
coefficients {Kd (ml/g)} as an index of the radionuclide behaviour.
Plutonium Kds for living bacteria varied within a large range, from 1,804 to
112,952, depending on the pH, while the Kds ranged from 1,180 to 5,931 for
dead bacteria. In general, living bacteria had higher plutonium Kds than
dead bacteria. Furthermore, the higher Kd values of 39,677 to 106,915 for
living bacteria were obtained for a pH range between 6.83 and 8.25, while no
visible pH effect was observed for dead bacteria. These Kd values were
obtained using tracers for both 236Pu and 239Pu, which
can check the experimental procedures and mass balance.
Another comparison was conducted for plutonium Kd values of mixtures of
living bacteria with bentonite and sterilized bacteria with bentonite. The
range of Kd values for the non-sterilized bacteria with bentonite were 1,194
to 83,648 while Kd values for the sterilized bacteria with bentonite were
from 624 to 17,236. Again, the Kd values for the living bacteria with
bentonite were higher than those of sterilized bacteria with bentonite. In
other words, the presence of living anaerobic bacteria with bentonite
increased, by roughly 50 times, the Kd values of 239Pu when
compared to the mixture of dead bacteria with bentonite. The plutonium Kd
values for bentonite alone, both non-sterilized and sterilized, were within
a constant range of around 10,000 even though some of the data are not yet
available.
The bentonite used for this experiment was a product of Japan and the
sulfate reducing anaerobic bacteria was previously used for the treatment of
a pulp and paper wastewater. The results indicate that the effects of
anaerobic bacteria within the engineered barrier system (in this case
bentonite) will play a significant role in the behaviour of plutonium in
geologic repositories.