«Potential approach to
how radioactive elements could be «fished out» of nuclear waste.»
Not exact matches
Groundbreaking work by a team of chemists on a fringe
element of the periodic table could change
how the world stores
radioactive waste and recycles fuel.
Their fundamental discoveries may aid research into the management of nuclear waste, by helping scientists understand
how chemicals can be used to separate the most
radioactive elements.
Manchester scientists have revealed
how arsenic molecules might be used to «fish out» the most toxic
elements from
radioactive nuclear waste — a breakthrough that could make the decommissioning industry even safer and more effective.
By measuring the amount of
radioactive elements inside Earth, the detector can study
how the planet formed.
The evidence of its existence would be revealed by measuring
how the axis of nuclei of the
radioactive elements radon and radium line up with the spin.