Prof. Neupauer, Kasprzyk and Graduate Student Jack Greene's Research on Uranium Remediation
Professor Roseanna Neupauer of Boulder and Professor David Mays of Denver have created a process called Engineered Injection and Extraction, which has shown promising results in removing other contaminants. But uranium, which readily shifts between different oxidation states, has historically proven trickier.
Starting in the 1940s, nuclear weapons development drove uranium mining in the U.S. The process stripped uranium from rock, processed it into a powder and left behind vast piles of radioactive rock, or tailings. Many mines ceased operations by 1978, but officials didn’t remove the tailings until much later.
“This isn't necessarily as local as, say, a gas station tank that ruptures in the middle of the city, which has the possibility of endangering water supplies for large amounts of people—these places can be remote,” said Jack Greene, a graduate student in the .