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New Amidoxime Based Material TMP-g-AO for Uranium Adsorption under Seawater Conditions Jiayun Zeng, Hui Zhang, Yang Sui, Nan Hu, Dexin Ding, Fang Wang, Jinhua Xue, and Yongdong Wang Ind. Eng. Chem. Res., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.iecr.6b05006 • Publication Date (Web): 10 Apr 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on April 10, 2017
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Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research
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New Amidoxime Based Material TMP-g-AO for Uranium Adsorption
2
under Seawater Conditions
3
Jiayun Zeng1, Hui Zhang1, Yang Sui2, Nan Hu1, Dexin Ding1,*, Fang Wang1, Jinhua
4
Xue1, Yongdong Wang1
5
1 Key Discipline Laboratory for National Defense for Biotechnology in Uranium
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Mining and Hydrometallurgy, University of South China, Hengyang 421001, China
7
2 Hunan Taohuajiang Nuclear Power Co., Ltd, Yiyang, 413000, China
8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18
*Corresponding author: Dexin Ding
19
Key Discipline Laboratory for National Defense for Biotechnology in Uranium
20
Mining and Hydrometallurgy, University of South China, 28 West Changsheng
21
Road, Hengyang, Hunan 421001, People’s Republic of China.
22
E-mail:
[email protected] (Dexin Ding);
23
Jiayun Zeng and Hui Zhang contributed equally to this work.
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ABSTRACT:
2
molybdopyrophosphate-g-amidoxime (TMP-g-AO) was prepared by chemical
3
co-precipitation and subsequent chemical modifications. The successful grafting of
4
acrylonitrile group and the subsequent conversion of acrylonitrile group to amidoxime
5
groups were characterized by Scanning Electron Microscopy-Energy Disperse
6
Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy, X-ray Photoelectron
7
Spectroscopy, N2-BET and Thermal analysis. The adsorption behavior of uranium(VI)
8
on TMP-g-AO was investigated for low concentration uranium solution by batch
9
experiments at a fixed pH 8.2±0.1. It is found that the adsorption rate of uranium from
10
solution was 99.77% when the uranium concentration was 42.3 µg/L, pH, 8.2±0.1,
11
temperature, 298.15 K, and the adsorbent dosage, 0.05 g. The kinetic data follow the
12
pseudo-second-order model and adsorption equilibrium data fit the Langmuir model
13
well. The thermodynamics parameters (∆S, ∆H and ∆G) indicate that the adsorption
14
process is spontaneous and endothermic. The functional TMP-g-AO adsorbent
15
exhibits good selectivity and affinity for uranium ions under coexisting multi-metal
16
ions except for Fe3+ and Co2+. Desorption was performed and the adsorption rate of
17
uranium
18
adsorption-desorption cycles. In order to evaluate the potential application of
19
TMP-g-AO for uranium extraction from seawater, the experiments on adsorption of
20
uranium(VI) from natural seawater and the uranium-doped seawater were conducted
21
and the adsorbent exhibited high adsorption rate of uranium(VI). The results show
22
that the TMP-g-AO could be a very promising adsorbent for uranium extraction from
23
seawater.
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KEYWORDS: uranium(VI); amidoxime; adsorption; seawater
by
A
novel
TMP-g-AO
amidoxime
only
decrease
based
adsorbent
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five
titanium-
consecutive
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1. . INTRODUCTION
2
Nowadays, the traditional oil, coal and other nonrenewable fossil fuels are being
3
gradually consumed, which brings out various social and environmental problems.1
4
There has been a consensus throughout the world that people should try their best to
5
adjust the energy structure, improve the efficiency of energy, develop green energy and
6
achieve the sustainable development of economic and environment. Uranium is used as
7
a nuclear fuel to produce nuclear energy and the nuclear energy is considered as one of
8
the most environmentally friendly energies. According to a recent estimate, terrestrial
9
uranium reserves can only guarantee uranium supply for nuclear power production for
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100 years. To ensure the long-term development of nuclear power production, it is
11
crucial to exploit nonconventional uranium resources, such as uranium in seawater.
12
There areapproximately 4.5 billion tons of uranium in the oceans, nearly 1000 times
13
greater than the terrestrial uranium reserves.2 However, efficient and selective
14
extraction of uranium from seawater is particularly challenging because of high
15
salinity, high carbonate concentration, basic pH (7.9 ~8.4), low uranium concentration
16
(∼3.3 ppb) and other metal ions at similar or higher concentrations in seawater.3,4
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Up to now, a variety of approaches, such as solvent extraction, ion-exchange,
18
membrane separation, nano-filtration and adsorption, have been developed to
19
concentrate uranium from seawater.5-8 Solvent extraction has been successfully used to
20
separate uranium from seawater. However, it has a number of drawbacks such as long
21
time operation and large organic solvent consumption. For ion exchange method, the
22
ion exchange capacity and cycle efficiency are very low. Furthermore, the exchangers
23
are susceptible to saturation and regeneration is difficult. Membrane separation
24
processes have been used for several years to concentrate or fractionate suspended
25
particles and dissolved species,9 which are prone to membrane fouling and membrane
26
specificity needs to be further studied. Nano-filtration is influenced by the size of
27
separated species and pressures which may limit its application in the field of uranium
28
extraction from seawater. Adsorption, due to its high efficiency and ease of handling,
29
has been employed for the removal of uranium from nuclear industrial effluents, mine 3
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water and seawater10 and it is considered as one of the most promising techniques for
2
uranium pre-concentration from seawater.
3
Many types of adsorbents have been studied for the recovery of uranium from
4
seawater, such as metal oxide,11-16 chitosan resin,17-19 metal-organic framework,20
5
layered metal sulfides21,22 and amidoxime based adsorbents.23-25 Amidoxime based
6
adsorbents have attracted intensive attention since the 1960s due to the high
7
selectivity and affinity to uranium. Amidoxime based adsorbents adsorb metal ions
8
owing to lone-pair electrons in electron donating groups (–NH2, HNCH3, and N(CH3)2),
9
which form coordination bond and stable structure with metal ions.26 In many cases,
10
those amidoxime-functionalized materials can be synthesized by introducing
11
acrylonitrile groups (–CH2–CH–C≡N) into solid structures and then converting these
12
groups to amidoxime groups (–CH2–CH–C(NH2)=NOH)3. For instance, Xu et al.
13
prepared
14
precipitation graft copolymerization of chitosan and acrylonitrile, and then converted
15
the acrylonitrile groups into amidoxime ones using hydroxylamine hydrochloride.27
16
These combinations of chitosan and amidoxime groups had their respective advantages
17
complementary to each other. Das et al. synthesized a new series of amidoxime-based
18
polymer adsorbents using electron beam induced grafting of acrylonitrile and itaconic
19
acid onto polyethylene fiber.28 And the synthetic DMSO-heat-treated sorbents
20
adsorbed uranium as high as 4.48 g-U/kg-ads from seawater. Shen et al. reported that
21
the
22
polymerization, and the uranium adsorption capacity reached up 3.06 mg/g at pH 7.54
23
Lu et al. prepared the C8A-AO adsorbent which exhibited excellent selective
24
adsorption capacity of 98.425 mg/g at pH 7 for uranium ions in simulated seawater.55
25
These studies demonstrated that the amidoxime group has strong affinity and can
26
chelates effectively the uranyl tricarbonate complexes [UO2(CO3)34-] in neutral or
27
weakly alkaline solution. Therefore, the amidoxime based adsorbents are considered
28
as the most promising materials for adsorption of uranium from seawater. In addition,
29
some pyrophosphate adsorbents exhibit a large adsorption capacity for uranium ions
30
in aqueous solution. The maximum adsorption capacity of ZMPP-TBP for
amidoximed
chitosan-grafted
PAN/MMT nanocomposite
was
poly-acrylonitrile
prepared
through
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in-situ
via
intercalation
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uranium(VI) was 196.08 mg/g at 293 K and pH 6.52 Likewise, Wang et al.53 prepared
2
pyrophosphate Zr1-xTixP2O7 and TiP2O7 by microwave-induction, and the maximum
3
amount of the uranium on TiP2O7 reached up to 309.8 mg/g under the experimental
4
conditions (pH=5, t=60 min and T=303 K). These pyrophosphate adsorbents generally
5
have a large specific surface area and may be used for immobilization and long-term
6
storage of uranium ions due to the properties of near zero or negative thermal
7
expansion. In summary, the inorganic bimetallic pyrophosphate, as a base material,
8
grafts with amidoxime group which can compensate for the shortcoming of instability,
9
and the synthetic adsorbents tend to have a good surface reactivity.
10
In
this
work,
a
new
amidoxime
based
adsorbent
Titanium-
11
molybdopyrophosphate-g-amidoxime (TMP-g-AO) was fabricated by chemical
12
coprecipitation and subsequent chemical modifications. The successful grafting of
13
acrylonitrile groups on the surface of TMP-g and the subsequent converting of
14
acrylonitrile groups to amidoxime groups were characterized by Scanning Electron
15
Microscopy-Energy Disperse Spectroscopy (SEM-EDS), Fourier Transform Infrared
16
Spectroscopy (FT-IR), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), N2-BET and Thermal
17
analysis. The uranium adsorption behavior of TMP-g-AO was investigated for the first time.
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The influences of different factors, such as adsorbent dosage, initial uranium
19
concentration, contact time, temperature and coexisting ions, on uranium(VI)
20
adsorption were investigated by batch experiment at fixed pH 8.2±0.1. Sorption
21
isotherms of uranium(VI) were illustrated by Langmuir and Freundlich patterns. The
22
kinetic
23
pseudo-second-order models and the kinetic parameters were determined. In order to
24
evaluate the potential application of TMP-g-AO for uranium extraction from seawater,
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the adsorption of uranium(VI) from natural seawater (3.65µg/L) and the
26
uranium-doped seawater (61.02µg/L) was conducted.
27
2. EXPERIMENTS
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2.1. Materials. Acrylonitrile (AN), hydroxylamine hydrochloride (NH2OH·HCl),
29
N,N-dimethylformamide
experimental
data
were
(DMF),
simulated
silane
by
coupling
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agent
and
(KH-570),
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2,2-Azobisisobutyronitrile (AIBN), titanium tetrachloride (TiCl4), phosphormolybdic
2
acid (H3PO4·12MoO3), potassium pyrophosphate trihydrate (K4P2O7·3H2O),
3
ethanol, ammonia (25%), sodium carbonate and hydrochloric acid (36%) were
4
purchased from Tianjin Kermel Chemical Reagents Development Center (Tianjin,
5
China). All of these chemicals were analytic grade reagents without further
6
purification.
7
The stock solutions of uranium(VI) (1.0g/L) were prepared in the following
8
procedure: 1.1792 g U3O8 powder was first dissolved in hydrochloric acid (10 mL),
9
hydrogen peroxide (3 mL) and two drops of nitric acid by heating in the sand bath; and
10
the mixture was then cooled to room temperature and diluted with ultrapure water to
11
1000 mL, which was the standard solution of uranium. The solutions with different
12
uranium(VI) concentrations for experiments were prepared by diluting the stock
13
solution using ultrapure water.
14
2.2. Preparation of the TMP-g-AO adsorbent. TMP-g-AO adsorbent was prepared
15
by chemical co-precipitation and subsequent chemical modifications. The preparation
16
process of TMP-g-AO consists of four steps and is illustrated in detail in Figure S1.
17
(i) Synthesis of TMP by chemical co-precipitation: Firstly, equimolar amounts of
18
potassium pyrophosphate trihydrate and phosphomolybdic acid solutions were mixed
19
with a ratio of 10:1 (v/v), and the pH of the mixture was adjusted to 2~3. Then, the
20
solution of titanium tetrachloride was added dropwise to the flask under stirring until no
21
more white precipitation appeared. After centrifuging and discarding the supernatant
22
liquor, the sediment obtained was washed with ethanol several times and then dried in a
23
vacuum oven overnight at 333.15 K.
24
(ii) Modifying TMP with silane coupling agent KH-570 (TMP-g): 6.0 g of the
25
dried TMP was immersed in ethanol (120 mL) and deionized water (6.5 mL), and then
26
4 mL of 25 wt% aqueous ammonia and 2 mL of silane coupling agent KH-570 were
27
added. The mixture was stirred continuously at 328.15 K for 48 h. After filtration, the
28
sediment was repeatedly washed with ethanol to remove residual KH-570 and dried in
29
a vacuum oven overnight at 333.15 K.
30
(iii) Grafting acrylonitrile on the surface of TMP-g: First, 1.5 g of TMP-g and 100 6
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mL solvent of N,N-dimethylformamide (DMF) were added in three-necked round
2
bottom flask (with reflux condenser and thermometer), and the mixture was heated in a
3
water bath to 343.15 K under N2 flow and magnetic stirring of 1000 r/min. Then, 12 mL
4
of acrylonitrile (including 0.15 g of 2,2-azobisisobutyronitrile) was added to the
5
mixture by syringe, the mixture was kept in N2 atmosphere at 343.15 K for 5 h, and the
6
product of TMP-g-AN was collected by centrifugation and then washed with ethanol
7
several times to remove the residual DMF. Finally, the product was dried overnight at
8
333.15 K.
9
(iv) Converting acrylonitrile to amidoxime (TMP-g-AO): First, 1.5 g of
10
TMP-g-AN, together with 160 mL of water/ethanol (3v/1v) and 1.0 g of sodium
11
carbonate, was added in four-necked round bottom flask (with reflux condenser and
12
thermometer), and the mixture was heated in a water bath to 343.15 K under N2 flow
13
and magnetic stirring of 1000 r/min. Then, 1.39 g of hydroxylamine hydrochloride
14
(dissolved in 5 mL of water) was slowly added to the mixture by syringe, the mixture
15
kept in N2 atmosphere at 343.15 K for 5 h, and the yellow product of TMP-g-AO was
16
collected by centrifugation and then washed with ethanol three times. Finally, the
17
product was dried overnight at 333.15 K.
18
2.3. Instruments. A field emission scanning electron microscope equipped with
19
Energy Disperse Spectroscopy (SEM-EDS, Raith ELPHY Quantum Electron
20
Lithography (kit), Raith, USA) was used to characterize the morphologies of the
21
synthetic products. Fourier Transform Infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR, NicoletiS10,
22
Thermo Scientific, USA) was used to evaluate the change in the structure of the
23
synthetic products. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS, ESCALAB 250Xi,
24
Thermofisher-VG Scientific, USA) of the TMP-g-AO and TMP-g-AO –U powders
25
were measured using a Thermo Scientific ESCALAB 250 Xi spectrometer equipped
26
with a monochromatic Al Kα X-ray source (1486.6 eV) operating at 300 W. The
27
concentrations of uranium (VI) in solutions were measured by Inductively Coupled
28
Plasma Mass Spectrometry (ICP-MS, 7700X, Agilent, USA).
29
2.4. Batch Adsorption Experiments. The TMP material is dissolvable in solution, and
30
the materials of TMP-g, TMP-g-AN, and TMP-g-AO are insoluble and stable in 7
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distilled water and hydrochloric acid (0.1 M). The adsorption experiment of uranium
2
ions was respectively carried out by TMP-g, TMP-g-AN, and TMP-g-AO (m=0.05 g,
3
C0=53.83 µg/L, V=50 mL, pH=8.2±0.1, T=298.15 K, t=120 min), and the adsorption
4
rates of TMP-g, TMP-g-AN, and TMP-g-AO are respectively 58.37%, 69.16% and
5
98.94% which have a big difference. Therefore, we only studied the adsorption
6
behavior of TMP-g-AO by batch adsorption in the next experiment.
7
Batch adsorption experiments were carried out to investigate the effects of
8
adsorbent dosage, initial uranium concentration, contact time, temperature and
9
coexisting ions on uranium(VI) adsorption. Considering the practical application of
10
uranium adsorption from seawater, the pH of uranium(VI) solution was adjusted to
11
8.2±0.1 with 0.1 M HCl and Na2CO3 solutions. All experiments were conducted by
12
mixing 50 mL of uranium(VI) ion solutions with 0.05 g of TMP-g-AO adsorbent in
13
conical flasks, followed by shaking in a constant temperature shaker at 180 rpm for a
14
given time at 288.15~333.15 K. After that, 5 mL of the mixture was filtered by 0.22 µm
15
syringe filter and then soured by concentrated nitric acid. The mixture was used to
16
analyze the residual concentration of uranium(VI) by ICP-MS. All the experiments
17
were performed in duplicates and a blank sample was set at the same time to minimize
18
experimental error. Finally, the data were analyzed by origin software (Version 8.0,
19
USA).
20 21
The adsorption capacity Q (µg/g), adsorption rate Ads% and distribution coefficient K (mL/g) were calculated using the following formulas. − ) × 1) − ) % = × 100 2) − 1000 = × 3) =
22
Where C and C are the initial and equilibrium concentrations of uranium(VI) (µg/L),
23
respectively; V is the volume of testing solution (L); and m is the amount of the
24
adsorbent (g).
25
2.5. Desorption and Regeneration Studies. To evaluate the stability and reusability of
26
TMP-g-AO material, the adsorption and regeneration were performed in five 8
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consecutive cycles. In each cycle, 0.05 g of adsorbent was shaken with 50 mL of
2
uranium(VI) solution for a given time at 298.15 K. After that, adsorbent loaded with
3
uranium(VI) was eluted using desorption solution (50 mL 0.1 M HCl), and washed
4
with large amount of ultrapure water. Then, it was reused for uranium adsorption as
5
before. The desorption rate DE% was calculated using the following formula. #$% =
× 100 4) −
6
Where C (µg/L) is the concentration of uranium(VI) in solution after desorption;
7
and C (µg/L)and C (µg/L) are the initial and equilibrium concentrations of uranium
8
(VI), respectively.
9 10
3. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
11
3.1. Characterization
12
3.1.1. Scanning Electron Microscopy and Energy Disperse Spectroscopy. The
13
scanning electron microscopy is widely used to investigate the morphological features
14
and surface characteristics of the adsorbent materials.29 SEM was used to observe
15
morphologies of TMP (a), TMP-g (b), TMP-g-AN (c), TMP-g-AO (d) and
16
TMP-g-AO-U (e), and to compare their differences. As is shown in Figure 1, it is
17
clear that the diameters of samples are of nanoscale. In Figure 1(a), the TMP sample
18
presents a spherical shape and a smooth surface. After TMP-g is modified with
19
KH-570, the surface of TMP-g particles becomes rough. Furthermore, a dense
20
structure can be seen and much irregular matter has been generated between spherical
21
particles in Figure 1(c, d). These changes in the surface appearance of TMP-g-AN and
22
TMP-g-AO samples are due to the grafting and oximation. The surface of
23
TMP-g-AO-U are also rough and dense, as shown in Figure 1(e), and the surface of
24
TMP-g-AO is covered with many small particles which may be due to the adsorption
25
of uranium ions. The chemical compositions of the TMP-g-AO and TMP-g-AO-U
26
obtained by the EDS analysis are shown in Figure 1(f, g) and Table S1. In comparison,
27
uranium ion is adsorbed on the surface of the material and the atomic percentage of U 9
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is 1.75% after adsorption. However, the atomic percentages of both N and O elements
2
decrease, which may be attributed to the reaction between amidoxime groups and
3
uranium ions.
4
3.1.2. Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy. The Fourier Transform Infrared
5
Spectroscopy of TMP (a), TMP-g (b), TMP-g-AN (c), TMP-g-AO (d) and
6
TMP-g-AO-U (e) materials are shown in Figure 2, and the characteristic peaks of –
7
OH and –P–O at 3582 and 1564 cm-1 can be observed in the curve of TMP. After
8
surface modification of TMP by KH-570, the peak of –OH disappears and the new
9
characteristic peaks at 3161, 1406, 1178 and 885 cm-1occur respectively in the curve of
10
TMP-g, which is attributed to the groups of –CH2–,–Si–O–,–C–O– and –C=C–.
11
Additionally, in the curve of TMP-g-AN, a sharp peak at 2242 cm-1 is assigned to –
12
C≡N– and the peak of –C=C– at 885 cm-1 disappears owing to the polymerization
13
between –C=C– and acrylonitrile.30 In the curve of TMP-g-AO, the new characteristic
14
peaks for –NH2 (or –OH), –C=N–, –C–N– and –N–O– appear respectively with
15
wavenumbers at 3194, 1649, 1269 and 920 cm-1.31-33 Meanwhile, the peak at 2242 cm-1
16
related to –C≡N– disappears and the peak of –C=N– increases sharply, which
17
indicates that the nitrile group was converted completely into the amidoxime group
18
after reaction with hydroxylamine hydrochloride. In addition, the peak of –N–O–
19
moves from 920 cm-1 to 913 cm-1, and changes in peak positions and intensity around
20
550-1000 cm-1 region in the curve of TMP-g-AO-U can be assigned to asymmetric
21
stretching vibration of uranyl ion and stretching vibrations of weakly bonded oxygen
22
ligand with uranium.50,51
23
3.1.3. X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy. The chemical bonding states on the
24
surface of the samples are further investigated by XPS. By comparing the element
25
contents of TMP-g-AO with those of TMP-g-AO-U in Table S2, it can be found that
26
the contents of C1s and O1s increase from 38.29% to 39.46% and from 33.20% to
27
35.25% after adsorption, respectively. However, the N1s content decreases from 16.77%
28
to 10.85%, the reason of which may be that the surface of the synthetic adsorbent is
29
heterogeneous, and uranium adsorbed on the surface of the TMP-g-AO material
30
affects the elemental analysis since the analysis depth of XPS is generally from 2 to 5 10
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nm. Therefore, the C/N ratio increases obviously from 2.28 to 3.64. As shown in
2
Figure 3, the U4f5/2 and U4f7/2 peaks appear with the binding energies at 392.24 and
3
381.39 eV,34-37 and the U4f content reaches 2.29%. In addition, the C1s and N1s
4
spectra of the TMP-g-AO sample before and after uranium adsorption are shown in
5
Figure 4. The C1s of TMP-g-AO consist of the CO32-, C-O, H2N-C=N-OH and
6
C-C(C-H) at 288.34, 287.09, 285.89 and 284.50eV, respectively.38 The N1s can be
7
curve-fitted with two peaks at 399.19 and 400.64 eV for H2N-C=N-OH and
8
H2N-C=N-OH.39 After adsorption, the peak comprised of CO32-, C-O, H2N-C=N-OH
9
and C-C(C-H) at 288.35, 287.25, 286.08 and 284.69 eV can fit well with the C1s
10
curve of TMP-g-AO-U. And the N1s can also be fitted with H2N-C=N-OH and
11
H2N-C=N-OH peaks at 399.41 and 401.29 eV.40 In conclusion, the XPS analysis can
12
further confirm the FT-IR and EDS results.
13
3.1.4. N2-BET Analysis. The structural properties of the synthesized TMP-g-AO
14
material can be analyzed by the nitrogen adsorption-desorption isotherm. As shown in
15
Figure 5, the isotherm of TMP-g-AO firstly presents a steep increase in adsorption
16
which attributes to the characteristic of microporous materials, and then there is a
17
smoother hysteresis loops at relative pressures of 0.4~1.0 due to the nitrogen
18
condensation in the mesoporous. Therefore, the isotherm of TMP-g-AO seems to be
19
nearly type IV with a H4 hysteresis loop according to the IUPAC classification. The
20
BET surface area, pore volume and average pore diameter are calculated from the
21
appropriate section of the adsorption-desorption isotherm and the values of them are
22
48.183 m2/g, 0.116 cm3/g and 3.911 nm, respectively. Obviously, the pore volume of
23
TMP-g-AO is very small due to their dense surface, which is also confirmed by the
24
results from SEM.
25
3.1.5. Thermal Analysis. The TGA and DTG characterization was carried out to study
26
the thermal stability of TMP-g-AO adsorbent in an argon atmosphere. As can be seen
27
from Figure 6, the weight loss of 4.84% at ~120 °C can be assigned to the loss of
28
adsorbed moisture. Then, the TMP-g-AO sample has a 13.74% weight loss at
29
120~340 °C, which may be attributed to the decomposition of the amidoxime
30
groups.55 At last, the weight loss is about 11.07% due to the complete degradation and 11
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decomposition of the polymerized amidoxime group when the temperature is above
2
340 °C.57 Therefore, the mass ratio of the polymerized amidoxime group to TMP-g
3
and the weight percent of the polymerized amidoxime group in dry TMP-g-AO are
4
0.423:1 and 29.7%, respectively. This result provides further evidence that the
5
TMP-g-AO adsorbent is successfully prepared.
6 7
3.2. Uranium(VI) Adsorption Performance
8
3.2.1. Effect of Adsorbent Dosage. The adsorbent dosage is one of most important
9
factors that influence the adsorption equilibrium. Adsorbent dosages ranging from 0.01
10
to 0.08 g were used to investigate the effect of adsorbent dosage on the adsorption
11
behavior of the TMP-g-AO at a fixed pH value of 8.2±0.1and temperature of 298.15
12
K. As shown in Figure 7, the adsorption rate of uranium(VI) increases rapidly with the
13
increase of TMP-g-AO dosage when it is lower than 0.02 g, and then remains almost
14
constant. However, the adsorption capacity decreases continuously for the reason that
15
the amount of uranium ions adsorbed per unit mass of TMP-g-AO is reduced. With
16
the increase of TMP-g-AO dosage, the available adsorption sites on adsorbent surface
17
increase and thereby the amounts of uranium(VI) ions in aqueous solution will be
18
further decreased.
19
3.2.2. Effect of Coexisting Ions. In order to evaluate the selectivity of the TMP-g-AO
20
adsorbent, the influence of coexisting ions (such as V5+, Fe3+, Ni2+, Cu2+, Pb2+, Zn2+
21
and Co2+) on uranium adsorption was studied according to some related literature.41-43
22
The concentrations of coexisting ions in actual adsorption tests were designed by
23
taking into account of the concentrations of these ions in natural seawater and
24
presented in Table S3. The concentrations of V5+ and Ni2+ are close to those in natural
25
seawater, but the concentrations of other ions are several tens and thousands times
26
higher than those in natural seawater. The selectivity coefficient and distribution
27
coefficient of ions are determined after the adsorption reaches equilibrium. As shown
28
in Figure 8, it is obvious that the selectivity of TMP-g-AO for the coexisting ions is in
29
the order of U6+>Fe3+>Co2+>Pb2+>Ni2+>Zn2+>V5+>Cu2+. Moreover, the values of 12
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selectivity coefficient for coexisting ions are greater than 2 except for Fe3+ and Co2+,
2
suggesting that Fe3+ and Co2+ may be adsorbed onto TMP-g-AO with uranium(VI) ion
3
at the same time. Therefore, the functional TMP-g-AO adsorbent still has very good
4
selectivity and affinity for uranium ions under coexisting multi-metal ions except for
5
Fe3+ and Co2+.
6
3.2.3. Effect of Contact Time and Adsorption Kinetics. The effect of contact time on
7
the adsorption of uranium(VI) ions onto the TMP-g-AO was investigated for three
8
different initial uranium concentrations (42.3, 104.8 and 226.5 µg/L) and the results
9
are shown in Figure 9. It is clear that the adsorption of uranium(VI) ions consists of two
10
steps: a relatively rapid step and a subsequent slow step. The adsorption rate of
11
uranium(VI) ions increases rapidly in the first 30 min and then increases gradually until
12
the adsorption process achieves equilibrium after 300 min. The first rapid step may be
13
due to the surface physical sorption and chemical reactive sorption. However, the
14
subsequent slow step may be attributable to the reactive adsorption of the inner
15
polymer chain segments.40
16
In order to study the adsorption kinetics of uranium(VI) on TMP-g-AO in aqueous
17
solutions, two kinetic models (pseudo-first-order and pseudo-second-order kinetic
18
models) were used to investigate the kinetic mechanism of adsorption processes
19
between adsorbent and adsorbate.
20
The pseudo-first-order kinetic model is expressed as:
21
)* × , 5) 2.303 The pseudo-second-order kinetic model is expressed as: ln − ( ) = ln −
, 1 , = + 6) . ( ). × 22
Where Q (µg/g) and Q1 (µg/g) are the adsorption capacities at equilibrium and time t
23
(h), respectively;k* (h-1) and k . (h-1) are the rate constant of pseudo-first-order and
24
pseudo-second-order models for the adsorption uranium(VI), respectively.
25
The kinetic parameters such as k* , k . , Q and correlation coefficient (R2), can be
26
calculated from the linear form of models in Figures S2a and b and the results are
27
shown in Table 1. The values of Q increase obviously with the increase of the initial 13
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1
uranium concentration. Moreover, the values of Q and R2 for the pseudo-second-order
2
kinetics are higher than those for the pseudo-first-order kinetics. Therefore, the kinetic
3
behavior of uranium adsorption onto TMP-g-AO can be described by the
4
pseudo-second-order kinetic model. This indicates that chemical adsorption might be
5
the controlling step which may involve valence forces through sharing of electrons
6
between uranium(VI) ions and adsorbent.44
7
3.2.4. Effect of Initial Uranium Concentration and Adsorption Isotherm. The initial
8
uranium concentration provides an important driving force to overcome all mass
9
transfer resistance of uranium between the aqueous and solid phases.4 The experiment
10
on adsorption of uranium(VI) on TMP-g-AO adsorbent was carried out in various
11
concentrations and the contact time was long enough (3 days) to ensure that the
12
adsorption of uranium reached equilibrium. The results are shown in Figure 10. The
13
adsorption capacity firstly increases linearly with initial uranium concentration and
14
then it almost tends to equilibrium.
15
The adsorption isotherm reflects on the relation between the adsorption capacity
16
and uranium concentration when the adsorption process reaches equilibrium. The
17
adsorption data have been measured to simulate different adsorption isotherms
18
including Langmuir and Freundlich models. The Langmuir model is based on
19
assumption of homogenous adsorption and its basic equation can be expressed as: Q =
20
3 4 5 = 7) 1 + 5 )
The standard form of linear equation can be derived from equation (7) as follows: 1 = + 8) 4 5 4
21
Where X (µg) is the total amount of uranium in adsorbent at equilibrium, m (g) is the
22
dosage of adsorbent, C μg/L) is the concentration of uranium at equilibrium,
23
Q μg/g) is the adsorption capacity of uranium at equilibrium, Q= and b are
24
Langmuir constants related to adsorption capacity and adsorption energy, respectively.
25
The plot of C /Q against C is shown in Figure S3a.
14
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The Freundlich model is widely applied to describe the adsorption of uranium on
2
heterogeneous surfaces as well as multilayer adsorption and it is tested in the following
3
equation: ⁄
= > × * ? (9)
4 5
A new linear equation can be derived from equation (9) as follows: 1 ln = ln> + ln 10) A
6
Where K B and n are the Freundlich constants related to adsorption capacity and
7
adsorption intensity, respectively. The plot of ln Q against ln C is shown in Figure
8
S3b.
9
The isotherm parameters of Q= , b, KF, n and the correlation coefficient R2 are
10
calculated accordingly and summarized in Table2. It can be seen that Langmuir model
11
(R2=0.999) fits the experimental data better than Freundlich model (R2=0.756) and the
12
maximum adsorption capacity is 35.37 mg/g. The fact that the Langmuir model fits
13
the experimental data very well may be due to homogenous distribution of active sites
14
on the adsorbent surface, since the Langmuir equation assumes that the surface is
15
homogeneous.45
16
Considering many experimental conditions to affect the maximum adsorption
17
capacity of adsorbents, such as pH, temperature, contact time and so on, it is difficult
18
to directly compare the adsorption capacities in reports in literature. Table 3 presents a
19
comparison of the maximum adsorption capacities for uranium ions of different
20
adsorbents. The maximum adsorption capacity of uranium on TMP-g-AO reaches
21
35.37 mg U/g at 298.15 K and pH 8.2±0.1, which is much higher than that on other
22
adsorbents except for AO-OMS under very similar experimental conditions.
23
Adsorbents such as UHMWPE, amidoxime-based polymeric, and nanofibrous
24
adsorbent, are investigated for the removal of uranium(VI), but all of them need more
25
time to arrive at equilibrium and their maximum adsorption capacities are lower than
26
that of TMP-g-AO. Although hematite can reach adsorption equilibrium in a shorter
27
time, its maximum adsorption capacity is less than one tenth of that of TMP-g-AO. As
15
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a result, the TMP-g-AO adsorbent is suitable for uranium(VI) extraction in weakly
2
alkaline solution or seawater.
3
3.2.5. Effect of Temperature and Thermodynamic Studies.The effect of temperature
4
on the adsorption of uranium(VI) was investigated at nine different temperatures of
5
288.15, 293.15, 298.15, 303.15, 308.15, 313.15, 318.15, 323.15 and 333.15 K. As
6
shown in Figure 11, the adsorption rate of uranium(VI) increases gradually as the
7
temperature increases. In other words, the higher temperature is beneficial to the
8
adsorption of uranium ions, which may be attributed to the fact that increasing
9
temperature can promote the movement of molecules.
10
The thermodynamic parameters of the adsorption process including Gibbs free
11
energy change (∆G), enthalpy change (∆H) and entropy change (∆S) can be calculated
12
using following equations. ∆C = −DE FA G 11)
13
∆C = ∆H − E∆I (12)
14
∆I ∆H − 13) D DE Where K J is the equilibrium constant (Q /C ), T and R are the absolute temperature (K)
15
and the gas constant (8.314 J/mol/K), respectively. The plot of ln K J against 1/T is
16
shown in Figure S4, ∆S and ∆H can be obtained from the intercept and slope, and the
17
results are shown in Table 4.
ln G =
18
The enthalpy change (∆H) and entropy change (∆S) of adsorption are 77.86 kJ/mol
19
and 295.73 J/mol/K. The positive value of ∆H demonstrates that the adsorption of
20
uranium(VI) ions is endothermic in nature, and the positive value of ∆S indicates the
21
stability of adsorption system and reflects an increase on the randomness during the
22
adsorption process. Furthermore, the value of ∆G decreases with increasing
23
temperature, which indicates that the adsorption process of uranium onto TMP-g-AO is
24
spontaneous and higher temperatures are feasible for uranium adsorption.
25
3.2.6. Desorption and Regeneration. Desorption and regeneration processes are very
26
important to evaluate the economic performance of absorbent in actual application. In
27
this study, the hydrochloric acid was used as desorption agent. The adsorption and 16
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desorption experiments were carried out five times. Table S4 show that both
2
adsorption and desorption rates slightly decline after five cycles. The declination of
3
adsorption rate may be attributed to the fact that the undesorbed uranium ions occupy
4
the binding sites due to insufficient contact time and the active sites of binding
5
uranium ions decrease on TMP-g-AO as the adsorption-desorption experiments
6
increase. It is reported that the sorption amount of uranium(VI) for AOGONRs
7
decreases slightly from 0.94 to 0.89 mmol/g after five consecutive sorption/desorption
8
cycles.46 Likewise, AO-HTC has a 7.37% decrement of sorption capacity after five
9
cycles.47 Although the adsorption rate of uranium on TMP-g-AO has a 1.42%
10
decrease after five cycles, it is less than that of AOGONRs and AO-HTC. As a result,
11
TMP-g-AO material has the potential of regeneration and reuse, which enhances the
12
economy of the adsorption process to some extent.
13
3.3. Application in Adsorption of Uranium from Seawater. From the experimental
14
results obtained, it can be seen that TMP-g-AO adsorbent has a high adsorption rate
15
and a large adsorption capacity for uranium ions in weakly alkaline solution and the
16
adsorption can reach equilibrium in a very short time. Furthermore, the adsorbent
17
exhibits a very good selectivity and affinity for uranium ions in the presence of
18
coexisting ions. In order to evaluate the potential application of TMP-g-AO for
19
uranium extraction from seawater, we carried out the experiments on adsorption of
20
uranium(VI) from natural seawater and the uranium-doped seawater. The natural
21
seawater used in the adsorption experiments came from near-surface seawater from
22
Hainan Province, China, collected in the tanks. The concentrations of uranium ions in
23
seawater and the uranium-doped seawater are 3.65 and 61.02 µg/L, respectively. After
24
three days of adsorption by the adsorbent (0.05 g) at 298.15 K, the concentrations
25
decreased to 0.66 and 1.34 µg/L, the adsorption rates of uranium(VI) reached to 81.92%
26
and 97.80%, respectively. This demonstrates that the material still has high adsorption
27
rate in high salinity and multi-ionic solutions. Therefore, TMP-g-AO has great
28
potential application in the area of separation and enrichment of uranium from
29
seawater.
30 17
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4.CONCLUSIONS
2
A novel TMP-g-AO adsorbent was developed for highly efficient extraction of
3
uranium from seawater. The TMP-g-AO adsorbent was synthesized by chemical
4
co-precipitation and subsequent chemical modifications. According to the batch
5
adsorption experiment, the adsorption rate and capacity are influenced by adsorbent
6
dosage, coexisting ions, initial uranium concentration, contact time and temperature to
7
some extent. In addition, the synthetic process and uranium adsorption were
8
characterized by SEM-EDS, FT-IR, XPS, N2-BET and Thermal analysis. SEM images
9
show that TMP-g-AO is spherical shape particle of nanoscale and the surfaces of the
10
samples become rough and dense during chemical modification processes. A sharp
11
peak at 2242 cm-1 indicates the successful grafting of acrylonitrile and new
12
characteristic peaks at 3194, 1649, 1269 and 920 cm-1 demonstrate the conversion of
13
nitrile group into the amidoxime group. The results of EDS, FT-IR and XPS show that
14
uranium ion is adsorbed on the surface of TMP-g-AO after adsorption. The values of
15
BET surface area, pore volume, and average pore diameter from N2-BET analysis are
16
48.183 m2/g, 0.116 cm3/g and 3.911 nm, respectively, which indicate that the pore
17
volume of TMP-g-AO is very small due to its dense surface. The results of TGA and
18
DTG analyses show that the mass ratio of the polymerized amidoxime group to
19
TMP-g and the weight percent of the polymerized amidoxime group in dry
20
TMP-g-AO are 0.423:1 and 29.7%, respectively.
21
The kinetic study suggests that uranium adsorption onto TMP-g-AO follows the
22
pseudo-second-order kinetic model. The adsorption equilibrium data fit the Langmuir
23
isotherm model well and the maximum adsorption capacity of uranium is 35.37 mg/g
24
at 298.15 K and pH 8.2±0.1. The results of thermodynamic study show that the
25
adsorption process is spontaneous and endothermic. The functional TMP-g-AO
26
adsorbent exhibits very good selectivity and affinity for uranium ions under
27
coexisting multi-metal ions except for Fe3+ and Co2+. Desorption is performed and the
28
adsorption rate of uranium on TMP-g-AO only has a 1.42% decrease after five
29
consecutive adsorption-desorption cycles. The TMP-g-AO adsorbent also has high 18
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adsorption rate for uranium in seawater. As a result, the TMP-g-AO could be a very
2
promising adsorbent for uranium extraction from seawater.
3 4
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
5
This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China
6
(91326106, U1401321 and 114055081), the Development Program for Science and
7
Technology for National Defense (B3720132001) and the Research Foundation of
8
Education Bureau of Hunan Province (16C1386).
9 10
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25. Yin, Z.; Xiong, J.; Chen, M.; Hu, A.; Cheng, H. M., Recovery of uranium (VI)
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alcohol-g-amidoxime:Physicochemical
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Synthesis and characterization of amidoxime modified calix[8]arene for adsorption of
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U(VI) in low concentration uranium solutions. Rsc. Adv. 2016, 6, 101087-101097.
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Figure captions
2
Figure 1. SEM images (TMP (a), TMP-g (b), TMP-g-AN (c), TMP-g-AO (d) and
3
TMP-g-AO-U (e)) and EDS (TMP-g-AO (f) and TMP-g-AO-U (g)).
4
Figure 2. FT-IR of TMP (a), TMP-g (b), TMP-g-AN (c), TMP-g-AO (d) and
5
TMP-g-AO-U (e).
6
Figure 3. XPS full-scan spectra and U4f spectra of TMP-g-AO and TMP-g-AO-U.
7
Figure 4. C1s and N1s spectra of TMP-g-AO and TMP-g-AO-U.
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Figure 5. Adsorption-desorption isotherms of nitrogen on TMP-g-AO.
9
Figure 6. TGA and DTG analyses of TMP-g-AO.
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Figure 7. Effect of adsorbent dosage on adsorption rate and capacity of uranium(VI)
11
(V=50 mL, C0=65 µg/L, pH=8.2±0.1, t=120 min, T=298.15 K).
12
Figure 8. Comparison of selectivity and distribution coefficients of coexisting ions on
13
TMP-g-AO (V=50 mL, pH=8.2±0.1, m=0.05 g, T=298.15 K).
14
Figure 9. Effect of contact time on adsorption rate of uranium(VI) (V=100 mL,
15
pH=8.2±0.1, m=0.1 g, T=298.15 K).
16
Figure 10. Effect of initial uranium concentration on adsorption capacity of uranium(VI)
17
(V=50 mL, pH=8.2±0.1, m=0.05 g, T=298.15 K).
18
Figure11. Effect of temperature on adsorption rate of uranium(VI) (V=50 mL, C0=65
19
µg/L, pH=8.2±0.1, t= 120 min, m=0.05 g).
20
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Table 1. Parameters for kinetic models of uranium(VI) adsorption onto
2
TMP-g-AO Pseudo-first-order kinetics Concentration
Q (exp)
(µg/L)
(µg/g)
k1(min-1)
Q (cal)
R2
Pseudo-second-order kinetics k2(min-1)
(µg/g)
Q (cal)
R2
(µg/g)
42.3
42.26
0.0318
8.53
0.833
0.0058
42.63
0.999
104.8
104.47
0.0316
27.09
0.828
0.0018
105.71
0.999
226.5
211.01
0.0265
85.88
0.990
0.0006
210.97
0.998
3 4
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Table 2. Constants for adsorption isotherm models for uranium(VI) adsorption
2
onto TMP-g-AO. Langmuir
Freundlich
Q= (103µg/g)
b
R2
KF
n
R2
35.37
3.3
0.999
13.21
2.03
0.756
3 4
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Table 3. Comparison of adsorption capacities for uranium ion of various adsorbents. Experimental
4KL
conditions
(mg/g)
UHMWPE
298.15±1K, pH8.1±0.3, 42 days
1.97
42
pA
296.15 K,pH8,72 hours
14.8
48
Amidoxime-based polymeric
293.15 K, seawater, 8 weeks
3.3
2
57
3
Adsorbent
Reference
ambient temperature, simulated AO-OMS seawater, 24 hours Hematite
293 K, pH7, 6 hours
3.36
56
Nanofibrous adsorbent
298.15±2 K, pH8, 30 days
2.86
49
TMP-g-AO
298.15 K, pH8.2±0.1, 72 hours
35.37
This work
3 4
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Table 4. Thermodynamic parameters for uranium(VI) adsorption onto
2
TMP-g-AO. ∆H (kJ/mol)
∆S (J/mol·K)
T(K)
∆G (kJ/mol)
R2
77.86
295.73
288.15
-7.35
0.953
293.15
-8.83
298.15
–10.31
303.15
–11.79
308.15
–13.27
313.15
–14.75
318.15
–16.23
323.15
-17.71
333.15
-20.66
3 4
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Figure 1.
3
4
5 6 7
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Figure 2.
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Figure 3.
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Figure 4.
3
4 5 6 7
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Figure 5.
3 4
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Figure 6.
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Figure 7.
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Figure 8.
3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
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Figure 9.
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Figure 10.
3 4 5 6 7 8
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Figure 11.
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