1. High-efficiency and economical uranium extraction from seawater with easily prepared supramolecular complexes.
- Author
-
Chen, Dingyang, Sun, Mengfei, Zhao, Xinyue, Shi, Minsi, Fu, Xingyu, Hu, Wei, and Zhao, Rui
- Subjects
- *
URANIUM , *SEAWATER , *PHYTIC acid , *HYDROGEN bonding interactions , *NUCLEAR energy - Abstract
[Display omitted] Developing effective adsorbents for uranium extraction from natural seawater is strategically significant for the sustainable fuel supply of nuclear energy. Herein, stable and low-cost supramolecular complexes (PA-bPEI complexes) were facilely constructed through the assembly of phytic acid and hyperbranched polyethyleneimine based on the multiple modes of electrostatic interaction and hydrogen bonding. The PA-bPEI complexes exhibited not only high uptake (841.7 mg g−1) and selectivity (uranium/vanadium selectivity = 84.1) toward uranium but also good antibacterial ability against biofouling. Mechanism analysis revealed that phosphate chelating groups and amine assistant groups coordinated the uranyl ions together with a high affinity. To be more suitable for practical applications, powdery PA-bPEI complexes were compounded with sodium alginate to fabricate various macroscopic adsorbents with engineered forms, which achieved an extraction capacity of 9.0 mg g−1 in natural seawater after 50 days of testing. Impressively, the estimated economic cost of the macroscopic adsorbent for uranium extraction from seawater ($96.5 ∼ 138.1 kg−1 uranium) was lower than that of all currently available uranium adsorbents. Due to their good uranium extraction performance and low economic cost, supramolecular complex-based adsorbents show great potential for industrial uranium extraction from seawater. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF