This depends on the quantity, chemical form, physical form, enrichment.
In laboratory, for small samples, can by used bottles from glass, polyethylene, polypropylene, Teflon.
In industry containers of stainless steel or polyesters reinforced with glass fibers can be used.
For uranium fluorides nickel alloys are recommended.
Uranium is typically disposed of by storing it in specially designed containers, such as steel drums, and burying it deep underground in a geologically stable location, such as a designated nuclear waste disposal site. Additionally, some countries reprocess uranium to extract any remaining usable fuel and reduce waste volume.
Some examples of uranium compounds are: uranyl nitrate, uranium dioxide, uranium hexafluoride, uranium tetrachloride, triuraniumoctaoxide, uranyl acetate, uranium iodide, uranium nitride, uranium, sulfide, uranium carbide, uranyl sulfate, etc.
Uranium oxide is a compound made up of uranium and oxygen, and is not considered a metal. Uranium itself is a metal, but when combined with oxygen to form uranium oxide, it becomes a ceramic material.
Uranium-238 and uranium-234 are not "elements", but they are natural isotopes of the chemical element uranium. The atoms are neutral.
The uranium oxide U3O8 contain 84,8 % uranium.
The package depends on the quantity, chemical compound, physical form: glass or plastic bottles for laboratory reagents with uranium, stainless steel containers for bulk uranium dioxide powder, also steel containers for uranium hexafluoride, etc.
Containers for uranium pellets are typically called fuel rods or fuel assemblies. These containers are designed to safely hold the uranium pellets, which are used as fuel in nuclear reactors to generate energy through the process of nuclear fission.
Uranium hexafluoride is stored in special stainless steel or monel (a nickel alloy) containers.
uranyl nitrate, uranium chloride, uranium tetrafluoride, uranium hexafluoride, uranium dioxide, uranium octaoxide, uranyl acetate, uranyl sulfate, uranyl oxalate, uranium carbide, uranium nitride, uranium sulfide, uranium sulfate, uranium selenide, etc.
Uranium is typically disposed of by storing it in specially designed containers, such as steel drums, and burying it deep underground in a geologically stable location, such as a designated nuclear waste disposal site. Additionally, some countries reprocess uranium to extract any remaining usable fuel and reduce waste volume.
Examples:Oxides: uranium dioxide, uranium trioxide, uranium octaoxideSalts: ammonium diuranate, uranyl nitrate, uranyl acetate, uranium hehxafluoride, uranium chlorideand many others because uranium is a reactive metal.
uranyl nitrate, uranium dioxide, uranium octaoxide, uranium hexafluoride, uranyl acetate, uranium tetrachloride, uranium carbide, uranium nitride, uranium tetraiodide, uranium sulfide, ammonium diuranate, etc.
uranyl nitrate, uranium chloride, uranium tetrafluoride, uranium hexafluoride, uranium dioxide, uranium octaoxide, uranyl acetate, uranyl sulfate, uranyl oxalate, uranium carbide, uranium nitride, uranium sulfide, uranium sulfate, uranium selenide, etc.
Some examples of uranium compounds are: uranyl nitrate, uranium dioxide, uranium hexafluoride, uranium tetrachloride, triuraniumoctaoxide, uranyl acetate, uranium iodide, uranium nitride, uranium, sulfide, uranium carbide, uranyl sulfate, etc.
The percentage of uranium in uranium dioxide is 88,149.
Uranium is a chemical element with three natural isotopes (234, 235, 238). The natural uranium has cca. 0,72 % uranium-235; uranium with a concentration of uranium-235 under 0,72 % is called depleted uranium; uranium with a concentration of uranium -235 above 0,72 % is called enriched uranium. Uranium in nuclear power and research reactors is used as metal, aloys, uranium dioxide, uranium carbides, uranium silicides, etc.
Cold uranium is unirradiated uranium.