Supramolecularly Poly(amidoxime)-Loaded Macroporous Resin for Fast Uranium Recovery from Seawater and Uranium-Containing Wastewater

Uranium is an extremely abundant resource in seawater that could supply nuclear fuel for over the long-term, but it is tremendously difficult to extract. Here, a new supramolecular poly­(amidoxime) (PAO)-loaded macroporous resin (PLMR) adsorbent has been explored for highly efficient uranium adsorpt...

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Published inACS applied materials & interfaces Vol. 13; no. 2; pp. 3246 - 3258
Main Authors Wen, Shunxi, Sun, Ye, Liu, Rongrong, Chen, Lin, Wang, Jiawen, Peng, Shuyi, Ma, Chunxin, Yuan, Yihui, Gong, Weitao, Wang, Ning
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States American Chemical Society 20.01.2021
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Summary:Uranium is an extremely abundant resource in seawater that could supply nuclear fuel for over the long-term, but it is tremendously difficult to extract. Here, a new supramolecular poly­(amidoxime) (PAO)-loaded macroporous resin (PLMR) adsorbent has been explored for highly efficient uranium adsorption. Through simply immersing the macroporous resin in the PAO solution, PAOs can be firmly loaded on the surface of the nanopores mainly by hydrophobic interaction, to achieve the as-prepared PLMR. Unlike existing amidoxime-based adsorbents containing many inner minimally effective PAOs, almost all the PAOs of PLMR have high uranium adsorption efficiency because they can form a PAO-layer on the nanopores with molecular-level thickness and ultrahigh specific surface area. As a result, this PLMR has highly efficient uranium adsorbing performance. The uranium adsorption capacity of the PLMR was 157 mg/g (the U PAO in the PLMR was 1039 mg/g), in 32 ppm uranium-spiked seawater for 120 h. Additionally, uranium in 1.0 L 100 ppb U-spiked both water and seawater can be removed quickly and the recovery efficiency can reach 91.1 ± 1.7% and 86.5 ± 1.9%, respectively, after being filtered by a column filled with 200 mg PLMR at 300 mL/min for 24 h. More importantly, after filtering 200 T natural seawater with 200 g PLMR for only 10 days, the uranium-uptake amount of the PLMR reached 2.14 ± 0.21 mg/g, and its average uranium adsorption speed reached 0.214 mg/(g·day) which is very fast among reported amidoxime-based adsorbents. This new adsorbent has great potential to quickly and massively recover uranium from seawater and uranium-containing wastewater. Most importantly, this work will provide a simple but general strategy to greatly enhance the uranium adsorption efficiency of amidoxime-functionalized adsorbents with ultrahigh specific surface area via supramolecular interaction, and even inspire the exploration of other adsorbents.
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ISSN:1944-8244
1944-8252
DOI:10.1021/acsami.0c21046