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NEWS & COMMENTARY 2008 SPEAKERS 2007 2006 2005

Sunday, January 01, 2006

Iran develops uranium separation technology

TEHRAN (AFP) - Iran has developed technology to separate uranium from its ore, reinforcing the Islamic republic's self-sufficiency in the nuclear fuel cycle.

The technology, known as a mixer-settler, is used to separate the uranium from the mined ore to produce concentrated uranium oxide -- also known as yellowcake -- which can then be converted and enriched in nuclear fuel work.

"The mixer-settler can be used effectively in the fuel cycle for producing zirconium and uranium," one of the engineers, who helped develop the machinery, said on state television Sunday.

"It minimizes the use of solvent and has a recycling mechanism," he said, adding the country could not afford to buy the machinery before. Zirconium is a metal used for coating tubes in nuclear plants to prevent corrosion.

In a mixer settler, two liquids of different density are mixed, allowing certain chemical compounds pass from one liquid phase into the other. The two liquids then settle due to natural gravity.

The United States accuses Iran of trying to master the civil nuclear fuel cycle as a cover for a military programme to obtain atomic weapons -- a charge vehemently denied by Tehran.

Iran announced in 2003 its intention to start extraction of uranium from a mine at Saghand, in the province of Yazd, which has an estimated 1.5 million tons of uranium ore.

Once refined, the yellowcake is usually sent to conversion facility for conversion into uranium hexafluoride gas and subsequently for enrichment before making it to a nuclear reactor.

In August, Iran ended its freeze on the conversion of yellowcake to uranium hexafluoride gas (UF6) at a facility near the central city of Isfahan. So far it has agreed to maintain a freeze of enrichment at a plant in Natanz.

Iran's right to enrichment has proved a major stumbling block in talks with the
European Union on its nuclear programme, as in highly enriched form uranium can be used in the core of an atomic bomb.
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