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Artigo IPEN-doc 26391 Thorium and lithium in Brazil2019 - OLIVEIRA, GLAUCIA A.C. de; LAINETTI, PAULO E.O.; BUSTILLOS, JOSE O.W.V.; PIRANI, DEBORA A.; BERGAMASCHI, VANDERLEI S.; FERREIRA, JOAO C.; SENEDA, JOSE A.Brazil has one of the largest reserves of thorium in the world, including rare earth minerals. It has developed a great program in the field of nuclear technology for decades, including facilities to produced oxides to microspheres and thorium nitrates. Nowadays, with the current climate change, it is necessary to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, one of this way is exploring the advent of IV Generation reactors, molten salt reactors, that using Thorium and Lithium. Thorium's technology is promising and has been awaiting the return of one nuclear policy that incorporates its relevance to the necessary levels, since countries like the BRICS (without Brazil) have been doing so for years. Brazil has also been developing studies on the purification of lithium, and this one associated to thorium, are the raw material of the molten salt reactors. This paper presents a summary of the thorium and lithium technology that the country already has, and its perspectives to the future.Resumo IPEN-doc 12608 Recovery of thorium and rare earth elements from sludge with the aid of anionic exchanger2006 - ABRAO, ALCIDIO; FERREIRA, JOAO C.; SALVADOR, VERA L.R.; ZINI, JOSIANE; CARVALHO, FATIMA M.S. deAbstract During operation of a solvent extraction pilot plant for preparation of pure thorium nitrate, a thorium concentrate produced industrially from monazite processing in São Paulo containing the REE as main impurities and some minor elements like iron, titanium, lead, sodium and silica was dissolved with hot nitric acid following by digestion and addition of flocculants was filtered for the separation of some insoluble fraction. Thorium was extracted with TBP-diluent in a pulsed column. Small amount of this thorium nitrate was used for nuclear research and the gross production was supplied to some companies that manufacture thorium gas light mantle in Brazil. The raffinate still containing some thorium and the totality of REE was treated with sodium hydroxide and the hydroxides as sludge are stocked. Nowadays there is a stockpile of circa 25 ton of the mentioned material. In this work it is reported a process for separation of thorium from rare earth elements (REE) and their recovery from this accumulated sludge. It is dissolved with hot nitric acid, filtered to separate any insoluble and an excess of acid is added. The prepared solution is fed into a strong anion ion exchanger previously treated with 1mol L-1 HNO3. Thorium nitrate as an anionic complex is retained while REE and other impurities are passed to the effluent. This effluent is treated to obtain a rare earth concentrate for future work of individual separation of the elements. The resin could retain only very small amounts of cerium and lanthanum, but both are excluded when the column is saturated with thorium. Thorium nitrate is eluted with diluted nitric acid. The process is operationally simple and was developed and successfully performed keeping in mind a future installation for the recovery of thorium and rare earths from the above mentioned sludge.Artigo IPEN-doc 14064 Estudo de metais e de substâncias tóxicas em brinquedos2009 - ZINI, JOSIANE; FERREIRA, JOAO C.; CARVALHO, FATIMA M.S. de; BUSTILLOS, JOSE O.W.V.; SCAPIN, MARCOS A.; SALVADOR, VERA L.R.; ABRAO, ALCIDIOThe main goal of the present study is the analysis of toxic elements in plastic toys commercialized in Brazil. Metals like cadmium, lead, chromium, zinc, and aluminum, along with organic substances, such as phthalates, were identified in different toys by quantitative analytical techniques. Traces of thorium were detected in one of the studied samples. Although the measured radioactive dose was rather low, the presence of such a radioactive contaminant is against to the International Agency of Atomic Energy regulations. Similar toys manufactured in Brazil were analyzed and found to observe the standards defined by the National Institute of Metrology (Inmetro).