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Efficient Removal of UO from Water using Carboxycellulose Nanofibers Prepared by the Nitro-Oxidation Method Priyanka R. Sharma, Aurnov Chattopadhyay, Sunil K Sharma, and Benjamin S. Hsiao Ind. Eng. Chem. Res., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.iecr.7b03659 • Publication Date (Web): 20 Oct 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on October 24, 2017
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Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research
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Efficient Removal of UO22+ from Water Using Carboxycellulose Nanofibers
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Prepared by The Nitro-Oxidation Method
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Priyanka R. Sharma1, Aurnov Chattopadhyay2, Sunil K. Sharma1, Benjamin S. Hsiao1* 1
Department of Chemistry, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY11794-3400, United States
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2
University High School, Irvine, CA 92612, United States
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* Corresponding author
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E-mail:
[email protected]; Tel: +1(631)632-7793
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ABSTRACT
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Carboxycellulose nanofibers (NOCNF) were extracted from untreated jute fibers using a
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simple nitro-oxidation method, employing nitric acid and sodium nitrite. The resulting NOCNF
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possessed high surface charge (-70 mV) and large carboxylate content (1.15 mmol/g), allowing
28
them to be used an effective medium to remove UO22+ ions from water. The UO22+ (or U(VI))
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removal mechanism was found to include two stages: the initial stage of ionic adsorption on the
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NOCNF surface following by the later stage of uranyl hydroxide mineralization, as evidenced by
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the FTIR, SEM/EDS, TEM and WAXD results. Using the Langmuir isotherm model, the
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extracted NOCNF exhibited a very high maximum adsorption capacity (1,470 mg/g), about
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several times higher than the most efficient adsorbent reported (polyacrylic acid hydrogel). It
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was also found that the remediation of UO22+ ions by NOCNF was pH dependent and possessed
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the maximum adsorption at pH = 7. The removal efficiency of NOCNF was between 80-87%
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when the UO22+ concentration was below 1,000 ppm, while it decreased in to 60% when the
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UO22+ concentration was around 1,250 ppm.
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KEYWORDS
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Carboxycellulose, nanofiber, jute, nitro-oxidation, uranium removal
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Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research
INTRODUCTION
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Uranium is a naturally occurring radioactive heavy metal that can cause many adverse
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effects on animal and human health,1,2 such as nephrotoxicity, genotoxicity and developmental
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defects. 3,4,5 In certain regions of New Mexico, Australia, Austria, Kazakhstan, Canada, India and
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Czech Republic, where uranium abundantly exists in the bedrocks and groundwater,6 local
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civilians can suffer high elevation of uranium concentration in blood through contaminated water
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source.7-8 In addition, the potential of radioactive discharge from nuclear plants during meltdown
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can also pose a long-term water hazard.7-9 According to the US EPA (Environment Protection
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Agency) guideline, the maximum contamination limit of uranium is 30 µg/L,10 based on the
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long-term intake of the material in every day water intake of 2 L for 70 years. The major reasons
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for its presence in the environment, besides the leaching from bedrocks and emission from
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nuclear plants, also include coal combustion and fertilizer use containing uranium traces,12 which
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can all cause ground water contamination. Upon ingestion, uranium can rapidly appear in the
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blood stream and bind with red blood cells, forming uranyl-albumin complex that would
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accumulate in kidney and skeleton.11,12
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Several methods have been demonstrated to tackle the problem of uranium contamination
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in water. These methods include anion exchange, lime softening, enhanced coagulation, reverse
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osmosis, activated alumina adsorption and electrodialysis.13 Among these methods, the simplest
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and most effective method is through the usage of coagulant/flocculant, followed by
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microfiltration to remove the uranium contaminants from water.14 In this method, alum, ferric
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sulfate and ferrous sulfate are often used as the coagulant or flocculant agents, whereby their
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efficiencies lie between 50-90% and are more effective at pH 6 or 10. Alternatively, lime
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softening can be used as the primary treatment, having an average efficiency of 80-90% with the
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maximum effectiveness at higher pH values (e.g. pH ~ 10).15 Subsequently, anion exchange and
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reverse osmosis are used as the secondary treatment, where reverse osmosis is far more effective
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than anion exchange, and is capable of removing more than 99% of uranium impurities.13 The
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use of inorganic coagulant can cause environmental hazard due to their non-biodegradable
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nature, whereas the multi-staged treatment process is often time consuming, expensive and
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requires special set-up.
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We aimed to improve the use of coagulant/flocculant approach to remove the uranium
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containments from water in a sustainable, eco-friendly and cost-efficient manner. Our approach
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was based on the use of nanomaterials extracted from biomass, the most abundant polymer
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resource on earth.16 This is because these functional materials in nanoscale that can be extracted
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from varying cellulose resources have been demonstrated as very effective sportive media to
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remove heavy metal ions from water.17,18 For example, carbon aerogel prepared from
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microcrystalline cellulose were found to be very capable of removing Cr(VI) and Pb(II) ions;19
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the oxidized form of nanocelluloses, such as carboxycellulose nanofibers (CNF), were also found
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to possess excellent capability to remove uranyl ions (UO22+) or uranium (IV) ions (U(VI)), and
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arsenic ions, As (III) and As(V).20-23
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Oxidized CNF can possess very high carboxylate content, and be considered as a
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polyelectrolyte in water due to the presence of high surface charge (i.e., through carboxylate
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group, COO-). The negatively charged fiber surface can interact with positively charged heavy
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metal ions, such as chromium, lead,22 and uranium23. These oxidized CNF can be prepared from
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any biomass resources using different chemical pathways, including TEMPO mediated
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oxidation,24-28 carboxymethylation,29 phosphorylation,30 acetylation,31 and silylation.32 However,
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most of these pathways only work well for the cellulose component. Therefore, additional steps
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are required to pretreat the biomass and remove the hemicellulose and lignin components.
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Recently, we have demonstrated a simple method to extract carboxylated CNF directly from
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untreated (or raw) biomass using nitric acid (HNO3) or nitric acid-sodium nitrite (NaNO2)
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mixtures,33 which is termed as the “nitro-oxidation” method (hereafter, nitro-oxidized cellulose
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nanofibers are abbreviated as NOCNF). The presence of nitric acid can initiate the fibrillation
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process of untreated biomass by removing the components of lignin and hemicellulose, whereas
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the reaction of HNO3 (an oxidant) and NaNO2 would generate HNO2 and release nitroxonium
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ions (NO+) in the presence of excess acid. The produced nitroxonium ion is a very effective
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oxidizing agent that can attack the primary hydroxyl group (-CH2OH) of cellulose at the C6
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position and produce carboxylate groups. This method thus greatly reduces the need for multi-
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chemicals, and offers substantial benefits in reducing the consumption of water and electric
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energy.
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In the current study, NOCNF extracted from untreated jute fibers using the nitro-
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oxidation method, was used to test as an absorbent to remove UO22+ (uranyl) ions from water.
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The maximum adsorption capacity of NOCNF for removal of UO22+ ions was compared with the
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most effective adsorbent reported in the literature, i.e., polyacrylic acid based hydrogel
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adsorbent34, as well as with other existing adsorbents. In addition, the mechanism of removing
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UO22+ ions by NOCNF was explained thorough the use of Fourier transform infrared
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(FTIR),
scanning
electron
microscopy
(SEM)/energy
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spectroscopy
dispersive
X-ray
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spectroscopy (EDS), transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and wide-angle X-ray diffraction
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(WAXD) results. Evidently, the extracted NOCNF from jute fibers was found to be a very
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effective medium to purify the uranium contaminated water, whereby the floc, containing large
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aggregates of UO2(OH)2 crystals and NOCNF, could be easily removed using a simple and
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inexpensive gravity-driven microfiltration method.
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EXPERIMENTAL
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Materials
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Jute fibers were provided by Toptrans Bangladesh Ltd. (Bangladesh). Nitric acid (ACS
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reagent, 70 wt%), sodium nitrite (ACS reagent ≥ 97 wt%), sodium hydroxide and hydrochloric
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acid (36% assay) were obtained from Fisher Scientific and used without further purification.
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Uranyl acetate-2 wt% solution (Depleted Uranium) was purchased from Electron Microscopy
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Sciences, where the uranyl acetate solution was diluted using different amounts of distilled water
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to obtain the desired concentrations for the purification analysis.
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NOCNF Preparation Scheme
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NOCNF samples were prepared from untreated jute fibers by using the nitro-oxidation
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method with the mixture of nitric acid-sodium nitrite.33 Briefly, 14 mL (22.2 mmol) of nitric acid
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was added to 1 g of jute fibers in a three-neck flask. After 10 min of mixing, when all the fibers
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were soaked in the acid, 0.96 g (14 mmoL) of sodium nitrite was added. Immediately after the
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sodium nitrite addition, red fumes were formed. To avoid the escape of the fumes, the flask was
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closed with stoppers. The reaction was allowed to run for 12 h under magnetic stirring. The
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reaction was subsequently quenched by adding 250 mL of distilled water into the flask. Then, the
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reacted mixture was transferred into a 500 mL beaker allowing the white suspension to settle
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down. The upper layer in the beaker was removed by decantation and the sediment nanofibers
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were re-dispersed in 250 mL of ethanol/water (20:80 ratio) mixture. The procedures of
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decantation and nanofiber re-dispersion in the ethanol/water mixture were repeated 5-6 times,
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until the pH of the filtrate from suspended fibers reached 2.5. The nanofibers were then dialyzed
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using the dialysis bag (Spectral/Por, MWCO: 6-8 kD), until the conductivity of water reached 5
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µS. The carboxyl groups (COOH) on the NOCNF surface were converted to carboxylate groups
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(COONa) by the post-treatment using 8 wt% sodium bicarbonate for 30 min.
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The extracted NOCNF were characterized using FTIR (PerkinElmer Spectrum One
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instrument), conductometric titration and Zeta probe analyzer (Colloidal Dynamics), TEM (FEI
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Technai G2 Spirit BioTwin). The specific surface area of NOCNF was measured by
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NovatouchLX2 (Quantachrome Instruments) under the N2 atmosphere. The descriptions of the
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instruments used and corresponding techniques are given in Supporting Information.
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Preparation of UO22+ Solutions
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Uranyl acetate solutions with varying UO22+ concentrations from 25 to 2,120 ppm were prepared through the serial dilution of well-stirred 2,500 ppm of UO22+ stock solution.
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Remediation Measurements
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For the remediation measurement, 5 mL of uranyl acetate solution with different UO22+
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concentrations were mixed with 5 mL of NOCNF suspension having a concentration 0.23 wt%.
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Upon mixing, a floc was formed and settled down at the bottom of the holder. Floc and
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supernatant samples were collected and analyzed using the following procedures.
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Preparation of Supernatant Samples for Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectroscopy
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(ICP-MS) Analysis
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The supernatant (non-flocculated) portion was diluted by 100 times and was then filtered
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through a 0.1-micron filter to remove NOCNF. The resulting sample was first analyzed using the
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UV-visible spectroscopy (Thermo Scientific GENESYS 30 Visible Light Spectrophotometer).
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Later, the samples were further diluted by 10 times for the ICP-MS (SQ-ICP-MS, Thermo Fisher
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Scientific) analysis (Supporting Information).
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Preparation of Supernatant Samples at Different pH Values
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The effect of pH on the adsorption of uranyl ions by the NOCNF suspension (0.23 wt%)
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was also investigated. In this study, UO22+ solutions at a fixed concentration (2,222 ppm) and
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different pH values (3, 5, 7, 9, 10) were prepared and were subsequently added with the NOCNF
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suspension. As per above procedures, the non-flocculated portion was taken out and diluted
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below 100 ppb, followed by the addition of 2 wt% nitric acid and filtered through 0.1-micron
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filter and then submitted for the ICP-MS analysis.
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Calculation of Adsorption Efficiency of NOCNF
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The removal efficiency of NOCNF was calculated based on the initial and final UO22+
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concentrations divided by the final UO22+ concentration (measured by ICP-MS). The ideal
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adsorption capacity of NOCNF was calculated by the amount of UO22+ (mg) in solution to the
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amount of NOCNF (g) used in the experiment, assuming that NOCNF could remove all UO22+
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ions from the solution. The experimental adsorption capacity of NOCNF (abbreviated as Qe)
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was the product of the percent efficiency of NOCNF and the ideal adsorption capacity of
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NOCNF.
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Characterization of UO22+ Adsorption Mechanism by NOCNF
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The mechanism of the UO22+ removal from water using NOCNF was revealed by FTIR
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(PerkinElmer Spectrum One), UV-visible spectroscopy (Thermo Scientific GENESYS 30), SEM
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(Zeiss LEO 1550 SFEG-SEM) with EDS capability, TEM (FEI Technai G2 Spirit BioTwin) and
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WAXD. The descriptions of these instruments and the techniques used are also given in
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Supporting Information.
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Static Adsorption Study
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In order to determine the maximum UO22+ adsorption capacity by NOCNF, the
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adsorption equilibrium was estimated. In this study, the Qe value (i.e., the adsorption capacity
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adsorbed at equilibrium) was calculated based on the data obtained from the ICP-MS data using
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the Langmuir adsorption model. This model is based on a monolayer adsorption on the active
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site of adsorbent, having the following expression:
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ொ
ଵ
= ொ + ொ
(1)
210
where Ce is the original concentration of UO22+, Qe is the experimental adsorption capacity of
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UO22+ ions at equilibrium; Qm and b are the constants which can be calculated from the slope
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and the intercept of the linear plot based on Ce/Qe versus Ce (using the Langmuir model).35
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RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
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Characterization of NOCNF Prepared by the Nitro-Oxidation Method
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Figure 1(i) illustrates the FTIR spectra of jute fibers and extracted NOCNF using the
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nitro-oxidation method. There were significant differences between the two spectra, but also
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some similarity. To start, both jute fibers and extracted NOCNF exhibited 1372, 1150, 1100, and
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1030 cm-1 peaks, corresponding to the stretching and bending vibrations of glycosidic bonds in
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cellulose. The peaks in FTIR of jute fibers at 1515, 1739, 1460, 1240 and 810 cm-1 were due to
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the C=C aromatic symmetrical streching in lignin, xylan and glucomannan of hemicellulose,
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respectively. Notably, the intensities of these peak due to the hemicellulsoe and lignin moieties
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were all reduced or completely disappeared in NOCNF, indicating that the treatment of nitro-
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oxidation was effective in removing hemicellulose and lignin polymers in the cell walls of jute
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fibers. Two distinctive cellulose peaks: 3340 cm-1 due to the O-H stretching and 2900 cm-1 due
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to the CH and CH2 stretching, were present in both jute fibers and extracted NOCNF, but the
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intensity assosiated with the C-H stretching peak at 2900 cm-1 was found to decrease and that of
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the COONa peak at 1594 cm-1 was found to increase notably in NOCNF. This observation
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indicated that the nitro-oxdation treatment effectively coverted hydroxyl groups into carboxylate
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groups at the C6 position of the anhydroglucose unts.
233 234
The quantitative determination of the carboxylate group (COO-) in NOCNF was carried
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out using the conductometric tititration method, which content was found to be 1.15 mmol/g (the
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conductometric titration graph is shown in Figure 1S in Supporting Information). The surface
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charge on the extracted NOCNF measured by the zetaprobe analyzer was found to be -70 mV,
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indicating the polyelectrolyte behavior of NOCNF in suspension (the graph is shown in Figure
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2S in Supporting Information). The specific surface area obtained from the freeze dried NOCNF
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sample was 6.31 m2/g, which is comparatively lower than the NOCNF samples obtained from
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wood, algae and bacetrial celluloses,36 probably due to a lower degree of polymerization of in
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jute-based NOCNF.
243
Information.
The BET adsorption graph is shown in Figure 3S of Supporting
244 245
Figure 1(ii) shows the TEM image of extracted NOCNF from untreated jute using the
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nitro-oxidation method. The image revealed the long fiber morphology of NOCNF. As these
247
nanofibers were randomly entangled in the in-plane view, it was difficult to determine the exact
248
length of individual fibers. However, by using the ImageJ software of multiple fibers (20
249
filaments), the average length of the fiber was found to be 290 ± 40 nm and the average width
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was 4.47 ± 0.5 nm. Table 1 illustrates some characteristic properties of NOCNF extracted by the
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nitro-oxidation treatment.
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Characterizations of Floc Containing Aggregates of UO2(OH)2 and NOCNF
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Photographs of two samples: the UO22+ solution (2120 ppm) and mixture of 5 mL UO22+
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solution and 5 mL NOCNF suspension (0.23 wt%) are illustrated in Figure 2. It was seen that the
257
UO22+ solution appeared slightly yellow but was completely transparent. However, the mixture
258
exhibited a yellowish precipitate, settled at the bottom of the bottle. The precipitation occurred
259
in a relatively short time period (< 2 min) upon the mixing. This simple experiment suggested
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the NOCNF in suspension might be an effective medium for removal of UO22+ impurities from
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water.
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The precipitate was due to the combined effects of NOCNF aggregation, where UO22+
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behaved as a crosslinking agent, and the mineralization of uranyl ions forming uranyl hydroxide
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crystals, which was evidenced by the WAXD measurements. The WAXD profiles of NOCNF
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and floc (obtained by mixing of 0.0046 g NOCNF in suspension and 1,250 ppm of UO22+
267
solution) are shown in Figure 3. It was seen that the pattern of NOCNF showed the characteristic
268
peaks of (110) (not labeled), (200), and (004) reflections at 2θ angles of 16.5, 22.7 and 35.1°,
269
respectively, based on the cellulose I structure. In contrast, the floc sample exhibited prominent
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diffraction peaks, which could be labeled as (020), (002), (022), (151), (062), (171) and (131)
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reflections from the existence of the uranyl hydroxide (UO2(OH)2) crystal structure.37 The
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diffraction profile of NOCNF was found to be buried underneath that of uranyl hydroxide
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crystals.
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The FTIR spectrum of NOCNF was also found to overlap with that of the floc
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(containing aggregates of NOCNF and UO2(OH)2), where both spectra are illustrated in Figure
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4(i). The NOCNF spectra (Figure 4(i)A) exhibited several characteristic peaks of cellulose: 3400
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cm-1 for hydroxyl (-OH) stretching, 2,883 cm-1 for CH symmetrical stretching, 1,232 cm-1 for
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COH bending at the C6 position, and 1,204 cm-1 for COC symmetric stretching. In contrast, the
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spectrum of the floc (obtained by mixing 1250 ppm UO22+ solution and 0.23 wt.% NOCNF
281
suspension) showed a shift in the COO- stretching peak (1594 cm-1 for NOCNF versus 1630 cm-1
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for the floc). This shift was probably due to the crosslinking effect between the two COO- groups
283
and one UO22+ group in the floc. This verified the existence of chemical interactions between the
284
COO- group on NOCNF and the UO22+ ions. It was noted that the peak at 3340 cm-1 (-OH
285
stretching) of the floc was more pronounced than that of NOCNF, probably due to the large
286
number water moiety in the floc.
287 288
It was interesting to find that the actual UO22+ adsorption capacity of NOCNF in
289
suspension was much higher than the expected value based on the available COO- on NOCNF.
290
This suggested that the remediation process of NOCNF, which was a polyelectrolyte in water,
291
involved more than the adsorption mechanism due to the interactions between UO22+ ions and
292
NOCNF. The adsorbed UO22+ ions on the NOCNF surface clearly provided nucleating sites for
293
the mineralization of uranyl hydroxide crystals. In the literature, the mineralization of metal ions
294
in the presence of polyelectrolytes, such as polyethyleimine, has been well documented. For
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example, nanoscale lead crystals could be formed by adding lead sulfate solution to the solution
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of polyethyleimine (PEI).38 At low lead concentrations, even though the PEI component acted as
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a nucleating agent for lead crystallization, no visible changes in the mixture upon the addition of
298
lead sulfate to the PEI polyelectrolyte. However, upon the increase in lead sulfate content, the
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lead concentration exhibited a sudden decrease, where the fall point was refrerred as a ‘bend
300
point’. At this point, some visible changes occurred in the mixture, including the change in
301
solution color from milky white to transparent due to the growth of a large number of
302
nanocrystals. A similar physicochemical change (i.e., pale yellow transparent solution to beige
303
yellow as shown in Figure 2) was also observed upon the addition of UO22+ ions into a NOCNF
304
suspension in the current study.
305 306
The upper layer (non-flocculated portion) of the mixtures prepared by addition of UO22+
307
solutions with various concentrations into a 0.23 wt% NOCNF suspension was taken out (diluted
308
100x using distilled water) for UV spectroscopy measurements and the results are shown in
309
Figure 4(ii). It was interesting to see that solutions with higher UO22+ concentrations (i.e., 2120
310
and 1560 ppm) showed the absorbance above 1. However, solutions with lower UO22+
311
concentrations (880 and 640 ppm) exhibited almost no absorbance. These results indicated that at
312
low UO22+ concentration, NOCNF had a very good capability to significantly remove the UO22+
313
impurities. A more detailed adsorption capability study will be discussed later.
314 315
To understand the mechanism of UO22+ ions (at different concentrations) and NOCNF
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interactions, the floc samples were further characterized using the SEM/EDS technique, where
317
the results are shown in Figure 5. In this figure, the SEM image of the floc obtained by mixing
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low concentration of UO22+ (500 ppm) and NOCNF suspension revealed a relatively uniform
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NOCNF film (some regions showed patchy aggregates of UO2(OH)2 and NOCNF). The
320
corresponding EDS spectrum in the inset of Figure 5(i) provided quantitative information about
321
the different elements in the floc. In this spectrum, the carbon (C), oxygen (O), sodium (Na)
322
peaks were seen, which was consistent with the presence of the carboxylate group (-COONa) in
323
NOCNF. The silicon (Si) peak was also seen due to the use of silicon wafer support. The very
324
intense uranium (U) peak indicated the crosslinking interactions between the UO22+ ions and
325
NOCNF at low UO22+ concentrations (e.g. 500 ppm). Notably, no evidence of uranyl oxide
326
hydroxide mineralization was observed at this concentration. Moreover, the above results were in
327
consistency to the FTIR results.
328 329
However, the SEM image of the floc obtained in the mixture of UO22+ solutions at high
330
concentrations (e.g., 1250 ppm) with the NOCNF suspension showed a very different
331
morphology (Figure 5(ii)). In addition to the uniform layer of UO2(OH)2 and NOCNF
332
aggregates, large flower like (or spherulite like) uranyl hydroxide crystals were also evident.
333
The spherulitic morphology clearly indicated that the mineralization follows the conventional
334
nucleation and growth process. In other words, the adsorbed UO22+ ions onto the NOCNF
335
surface were acting as the nucleating sites for the growth of uranyl hydroxide crystals at high
336
UO22+ concentrations. This process was further confirmed by the corresponding EDS spectra.
337
The appearance of the dominant uranium (U) peak, as compared to much weaker carbon (C),
338
oxygen (O), sodium (Na) peaks from NOCNF, indicated that the mass of uranium present was
339
significantly higher than the mass of the NOCNF present, confirming the mineralization of
340
uranium onto the NOCNF surface. Similar results have been observed in the mixing study of
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341
lead sulfate and polyethyleneimine polyelectrolyte, where a large amount of lead nanocrystals
342
could be generated.37 Hence, the above results indicated that the removal of UO22+ ions by
343
NOCNF was mainly due to the adsorption process at low UO22+concentrations (≤ 500 ppm),
344
where the removal was further assisted by the mineralization process at high UO22+
345
concentrations (≥ 1,250 ppm), resulting very high removal efficiency.
346 347
The presence of uranyl hydroxide crystals in the NOCNF scaffold could also be
348
identified by TEM, where a typical TEM image of the floc (prepared by mixing NOCNF with
349
UO22+ ions at 1,250 ppm concentration) taken outside the spherulitic region is shown Figure 6.
350
This TEM image showed highly entangled NOCNF morphology (in some regions the edges of
351
fibers can be observable), whereby the black dots of uranyl hydroxide crystals in nanoscale were
352
observed throughout the region in a relatively uniform manner. The size of these nanocrystals
353
measured using the ImageJ software was in the range of 4-10 nm. These results are consistent
354
with several previous works, where the presence of cellulose nanofibers facilitated the formation
355
of different inorganic nanocrystals (e.g. ferrite, Ag, Au, ZnO, TiO2).39-41
356 357
Adsorption Capacity of NOCNF
358 359
The adsorption capacity of NOCNF in suspension was determined by the following
360
method. The ICP-MS results were used to calculate the Qe value (i.e., the experimental
361
adsorption capacity of NOCNF) and Ce/Qe ratio (i.e., the original UO22+ concentration of
362
NOCNF divided by the experimental adsorption capacity of UO22+ ions at equilibrium per gram
363
of NOCNF in suspension), where the plot of Ce/Qe versus Ce was then fitted with the Langmuir
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364
adsorption model. The results are illustrated in Figure 7(i). The value of Qe was calculated by
365
multiplying the adsorption efficiency of NOCNF by the ideal adsorption capacity of NOCNF,
366
based on the available carboxylate content (1.15 mmol/g). The results of the ideal adsorption
367
capacity and the experimental capacity of NOCNF are shown in Table 2. It was found that the
368
adsorption efficiency of NOCNF at the UO22+ concentration from 25 to 900 ppm was in the
369
range of 80-87%. The relationship between the adsorption efficiency (%) and the concentration
370
of uranyl ions (UO22+) is illustrated in Figure 4S (Supporting Information). It was seen that the
371
adsorption efficiency of NOCNF decreased to 66-67%, when the concentration of uranyl ions
372
was above 1,000 ppm. However, these adsorption efficiency values are comparatively lower than
373
those of ion exchange resins, such as layered sulfide materials, silica and MnO2 based resins.42
374
Based on the Langmuir adsorption model, the coefficient of LSRL (least-squares regression
375
line), or the slope, in the Ce/Qe versus Ce plot was 6.8149x10-4 (this slope was the reciprocal of
376
the adsorption capacity). This correlation had a R2 (adjusted R squared) value of 0.977,
377
indicating the relationship had excellent conformity to the Langmuir isotherm model (Figure
378
7(i)). Thus, the maximum adsorption capacity (Qm) of NOCNF was 1,467 mg/g, based on Eq. 1.
379 380
Floc Removal by Microfiltration
381 382
A simple gravity-driven microfiltration experiment was carried out to demonstrate the
383
possibility of removing the floc by a low energy filtration means. In this demonstration, the floc
384
was formed by mixing 5 mL of NOCNF suspension (0.23 wt%) and 5 mL of uranyl acetate
385
solution (the UO22+ concentration was 500 ppm). Photographs of the floc in suspension and the
386
used filter paper containing the gel like floc containing aggregates of UO2(OH)2 and NOCNF are
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387
shown in Figure 8. It was interesting to note that the use of a relatively porous filter paper having
388
an mean pore size of 40 µm was sufficient to remove the floc aggregates from water by gravity.
389
This can be explained as follows. Although the uranyl ions (UO22+) have a very small size
390
(aabout 3 Å43), they are effective crosslinking agents binding the NOCNF together and forming
391
large aggregates. Within these aggregates, the mineralization process of UO2(OH)2 further
392
increased the aggregate density resulting in precipitation of the floc. The average size of the floc
393
was very large, thus could be easily separated by microfiltration driven even by gravity. This
394
indicates that the extracted NOCNF in suspension has great potential to be used as the primary
395
medium to remove UO22+ ions from water with the removal efficiency in the range of 80-87%,
396
where the floc can be subsequently separated by any low energy filtration means.
397 398
Effect of pH on the Adsorption Efficiency
399 400
The pH effect on the adsorption efficiency for the removal of UO22+ ions from water was
401
also investigated, where the results are shown in Figure 7 (ii). It was found that the highest
402
removal efficiency of the NOCNF suspension was achieved at the neutral condition (i.e., pH =
403
7), where the maximum removal efficiency was in the range of 90%. The ICP-MS data obtained
404
from the analysis of the upper layer removed from the mixture of UO22+/ NOCNF at different pH
405
values are shown in Table 3. The efficiency of NOCNF was calculated as the original UO22+
406
concentration divided by the final UO22+ concentration after the floc formation. It was found that
407
the efficiency of NOCNF for removal of UO22+ ions was quite high (> 89%) at pH > 5.
408
However, at lower pH values (e.g. pH =2), the adsorption efficiency of NOCNF became lower (~
409
86%). This could be due the denaturing of NOCNF at very acidic conditions.
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410 411
Performance Comparison
412 413
The comparison of the maximum adsorption capacity (Qm) from varying adsorbents is
414
shown in Table 4. It was interesting to note that NOCNF extracted from jute fibers using the
415
nitro-oxidation method was found to be surprisingly effective in removing UO22+ ions from
416
water. In specific, the Qm value of our NOCNF was about three times more efficient than
417
polyacrylic acid hydrogels, which has been considered as the most efficient adsorbent to date.34
418
NOCNF was significantly better than carbonaceous adsorbent and calcium alginates beads,44,45
419
as well as mesoporous silica (SBA-15).46
420
underutilized biomasses such as grass, shrubs, weeds and agriculture waste, the potential use of
421
NOCNF for UO22+ removal or remediation of other metal ion contaminants from water can be
422
very promising. In Table 4, it was very interesting that the UO22+ removal efficiency using
423
TEMPO oxidized cellulose nanofibers,22 reported by our group, was around eight times lower
424
than NOCNF in this study. The major difference is because our earlier study did not include
425
measurements at high UO22+ concentrations, where the mineralization of uranyl oxide hydroxide
426
crystals took place.
427
contaminant concentration.
Considering the sources of NOCNF can be
In typical remediation study, the test should include a wide range of
428 429
CONCLUSIONS
430 431
NOCNF extracted from jute fibers using the nitro-oxidation method has exhibited
432
excellent removal efficiency of UO22+ (or U(IV)) ions from water. Being a highly charged
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433
colloidal particle (surface charge = - 70 mV, carboxylate content = 1.15 mmol/g) and having the
434
shape of nanofiber, NOCNF behaves as a unique polyelectrolyte in water and possesses great
435
potential for water purification applications. The mechanism of UO22+ removal includes the
436
combined effect of adsorption and mineralization, leading to a very high maximum adsorption
437
capacity of 1,470 mg/g. In specific, The adsorption efficiency for NOCNF at UO22+
438
concentrations below 1,000 ppm was in the range of 80-87%, however, the adsorption efficiency
439
decreased to 66% at concentration of 1,250 ppm. The adsorption efficiency was found to be pH
440
dependent and the maximum removal efficiency lied at the neutral condition (pH = 7). This
441
study clearly demonstrated that NOCNF extracted form biomass, such as untreated jute, using
442
the simple nitro-oxidation method, is an excellent medium to aggregate U(IV) ions in
443
contaminated water, where the resulting floc can be easily removed by low energy (e.g. gravity)
444
filtration methods. The simplicity of the NOCNF approach (from extraction to deployment) can
445
provide an attractive alternative, which is sustainable, eco-friendly and cost-efficient, to replace
446
the existing U(VI) removal methods using either inorganic flocculating/coagulating agents, such
447
as alumina, ferrous oxide, or sophisticated reverse osmosis and ion exchange techniques.
448 449
SUPPORTING INFORMATION
450 451
Instrumental and experimental descriptions of Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy
452
(FTIR), scanning electron microscopy (SEM) with energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS)
453
capability, inductively coupled plasma mass spectroscopy (ICP-MS), transmission electron
454
microscopy (TEM), wide-angle X-ray diffraction (WAXD), conductometric titration
455
measurements. Experimental results showing the relationship between the consumed volume of
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sodium hydroxide (NaOH, 0.4 M) and the conductivity during the conductometric titration study;
457
Zeta potential of NOCNF extracted from jute using the nitro-oxidation method; BET adsorption
458
curve for NOCNF extracted from jute using the nitro-oxidation method; The relationship
459
between the adsorption efficiency (%) of NOCNF and the UO22+ concentration used.
460 461
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
462 463
The authors would like to thank the financial support by the SusChEM Program of the
464
National Science Foundation (DMR-1409507). In additions, the authors would like to thank
465
Susan von Horn (iLab, Stony Brook University), Dr. Chung-Chueh Chang and Ya-Chen Chuang
466
(ThINC facility at AERTC, Stony Brook University) for conducting the TEM measurement, Dr.
467
Jim Quinn (Materials Science and Engineering, Stony Brook University) for the SEM analysis,
468
as well as Dr. David Hirschberg (School of Marine and Atmospheric Science, Stony Brook
469
University) for conducting the ICP-MS measurement.
470 471
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595
Table 1. Properties of NOCNF extracted from untreated jute fibers using the nitro-oxidation
596
method.
597
Charges
NOCNF
-70 mV
COO-
Size
Surface
content
(L/D)
Area
1.15
290±40/
6.31 m2/g
mmol/g
4.4±0.5 nm
598 599
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Table 2. Calculated ideal adsorption capacity and experimental adsorption capacity against
601
UO22+ ions by NOCNF in the concentration range of 25-1250 ppm. Original
Mass of
Original
Final
UO22+ conc.
UO22+
UO22+ conc.,
UO22+ conc.,
(ppm), Ce
used
ICP-MS
(mg) 1,250
a
b
Adsorption
c
Experimental
Ce/Qe
adsorption
adsorption
(g/L)
ICP-MS
capacity
capacity
(ppb)
(ppb)
(mg/g)
(mg/g), Qe
2.5
72.5
24.4
0.66
543.47
360.57
3.47
1,000
2
100
32.7
0.67
434.78
292.61
3.42
875
1.75
87.5
12.1
0.86
380.43
327.83
2.67
750
1.5
75
10.7
0.86
326.08
279.57
2.65
500
1
50
7.3
0.85
217.39
185.65
2.69
250
0.5
25
5
0.80
108.69
86.96
2.88
50
0.1
50
7.6
0.85
21.73
18.43
2.71
25
0.05
25
3.3
0.87
10.86
9.43
2.65
efficiency
Ideal
602
total amount of NOCNF used in 2 mL of 0.23 wt% suspension = 0.0046 g
603
a
604
b
605
c
606
Qe = experimental adsorption capacity; Ce = original concentration of UO22+ in ppm
adsorption efficiency = (original UO22+ conc. - final UO22+ conc.) / original UO22+conc. ideal adsorption capacity = milligrams of UO22+ in solution / grams of NOCNF in suspension
experimental adsorption capacity = adsorption efficiency x ideal adsorption capacity
607
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608
Table 3. Effect of the pH value on the adsorption efficiency of NOCNF pH
Original UO22+
Final UO22+
efficiency
value
concentration
concentration
%
ICP-MS (ppb)
ICP-MS (ppb)
2
22.22
3.50
86.2
5
22.22
2.55
89.9
7
22.22
2.14
90.5
9
22.22
2.71
89.3
10
22.22
2.66
89.0
609 610
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Table 4. Comparison of the maximum adsorption capacity (Qm) from different adsorbent. Adsorbent
Qm
Reference
NOCNF
1,470 mg/g
This study
Polyacrylic acid hydrogels 445 mg/g
34
Carbonaceous adsorbent
206 mg / g
44
Calcium alginate beads
237 mg/g
45
SBA – 15
170 mg/g
46
TEMPO oxidized CNF
167 mg/g
22
612
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Figure 1. (i) FTIR spectra of jute fibers and NOCNF (ii) TEM of NOCNF extracted from jute fibers (taken at scale bar of 100 nm and magnification of 395,000x).
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Figure 2. (i) Comparative image depicts two samples; left: 5 mL of distilled water with 5 mL of 0.02 wt% uranyl acetate solution (2,120 ppm), right: 5 mL NOCNF suspension (0.23 wt%) with 1g of 0.02 wt% uranyl acetate solution (2,120 ppm); at pH 7.
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Figure 3. WAXD of NOCNF and the floc obtained by mixing of 1,250 ppm of UO22+ and NOCNF (0.0046 g) in suspension. NOCNF was indexed by the cellulose I crystal structure, and the foc was indexed by the uranyl hydroxide (UO2(OH)2) crystal structure.
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Figure 4. (i) FTIR spectra of (A) NOCNF (B) the floc obtained by mixing of uranyl acetate (1,250 ppm of UO22+) and NOCNF suspension, (ii) Ultraviolet visible spectrum of nonflocculated portion obtained on addition of various concentrations of UO22+ ions into 5 mL of 0.23 wt% of NOCNF. Samples were diluted by 100x before analysis.
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Figure 5. (i) SEM image of the floc obtained on interaction of 500 ppm of UO22+ with 5 mL of NOCNF (0.23 wt%), inset left: EDS spectra; (ii) SEM image of the floc obtained on interaction of 1,250 ppm of UO22+ with 5 mL of NOCNF (0.23 wt%), inset left: EDS spectra (nucleating sites are marked by red circles).
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Figure 6. TEM image of floc consist of NOCNF with UO22+ ions (concentration used was 1,250 ppm). The black dots on the edge of NOCNF represent the UO2(OH)2 nanocrystals.
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Figure 7. (i) The experimental results of Ce/Qe versus Ce and the fitting by the Langmuir isotherm model; (ii) the pH effect of on the UO22+adsorption by NOCNF.
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Figure 8. Pictures of (A) NOCNF + UO22+ ions (500 ppm); (B) the floc obtained by gravity driven microfiltration using a filter paper (pore size: 40 µm).
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Table of Content Graphic
Efficient Removal of UO22+ from Water Using Carboxycellulose Nanofibers Prepared by The Nitro-Oxidation Method
Priyanka R. Sharma1, Aurnov Chattopadhyay2, Sunil K. Sharma1, Benjamin S. Hsiao1* 1
Department of Chemistry, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY11794-3400, United States 2
University High School, Irvine, CA 92612, United States
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