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Superparamagnetic adsorbent based on phosphonate grafted mesoporous carbon for uranium removal Syed M. Husnain, HyunJu Kim, Wooyong Um, Yoon-Young Chang, and Yoon-Seok Chang Ind. Eng. Chem. Res., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.iecr.7b01737 • Publication Date (Web): 07 Aug 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on August 13, 2017
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Superparamagnetic adsorbent based on phosphonate grafted
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mesoporous carbon for uranium removal
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Syed M. Husnain a,b , Hyun Ju Kim b ,Wooyong Um a,b , Yoon-Young Chang c
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and Yoon-Seok Chang a,*
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a
Division of Environmental Science and Engineering, Pohang University of Science and Technology (POSTECH), Pohang 790-784, Republic of Korea
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b
Division of Advanced Nuclear Engineering, Pohang University of Science and Technology (POSTECH), Pohang 790-784, Republic of Korea
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c
Department of Environmental Engineering, Kwangwoon University,
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Seoul 139-701, Republic of Korea
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* Corresponding author: Tel.: +82-54-279-2281; Fax: +82-54-279-8299;
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E-mail:
[email protected] 18 19
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Abstract
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A direct approach was presented to graft phosphonate groups on magnetic mesoporous
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carbon by an impregnation method with environmentally friendly precursors unlike the
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conventional methods involving series of complicated steps and harsh conditions. Through
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the in situ reduction of Fe3+, magnetite particles of ~10 nm were successfully embedded into
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the mesopores, which was confirmed by HR-TEM. Surface characterization by XPS and
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FTIR revealed that the phosphonate functional groups anchored through multi-dentate
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bonding with the surface of P-Fe-CMK-3. Due to the combined advantages of mesoporous
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pore size (5.5 nm), phosphonate ligands (1.42 mmol g-1), and magnetic sensitivity (5.20 emu
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g-1), this multifunctional adsorbent captured > 85% of UO22+ within five minutes and the
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maximum adsorption capacity was 150 mg g-1 at pH 4. The exceptionally high selectivity and
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efficiency of P-Fe-CMK-3 towards uranyl capture even in groundwater (Kd = 1 × 105 mL g-1),
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radioactive wastewater (Kd = 3 × 104 mL g-1) and seawater (Kd = 1 × 104 mL g-1) at V/m =
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1000 mL g-1 was better than that of the previously reported adsorbents. Importantly, the
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adsorbent maintained UO22+ adsorption efficiency > 99% over five cycles due to the excellent
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chemical and structural stabilities. Above all, the adsorbent could be manipulated for UO22+
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capture with help of a magnetic field in the real world, especially in case of nuclear accidents,
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decommissioning of nuclear power plants, and/or uranium recovery from seawater.
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Key words: Uranium, superparamagnetic adsorbent, radioactive material, phosphonic acid,
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mesoporous carbon
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TOC
46 47 48 49 50 51 Groundwater
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Seawater
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Radioactive wastewater 0
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50
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U Sorption Efficiency (%)
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Introduction
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As the heart of nuclear energy, uranium is the most abundant primordially occurring
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natural actinide. It has a pivotal importance in the nuclear fuel cycle as a source of energy as
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well as radioactive waste. It has a very long half-life (~4.5 billion years) and slowly decays
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by emitting α particles.1 Hexavalent uranium (U6+) and tetravalent uranium (U4+) are the two
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predominant oxidation states of uranium in the environment due to leaching from natural
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deposits, mine tailings, emissions from nuclear facilities and uranium-containing phosphate
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fertilizers.2 In most of radioactive wastewater at low pH, it exists as uranyl (UO22+) ion with
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significant mobility and propensity to enter the food chain. According to hard soft acid base
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(HSAB) sense, uranyl is regarded as a hard cation due to small size, high positive oxidation
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state and a low polarizability, which readily reacts with nucleotides and proteins due to its
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high affinity for hydroxyl, carboxyl, and phosphate groups.3, 4 Acute exposure to uranium can 3 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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induce health concerns including reproductive, renal, developmental, DNA, and brain
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damages.5 Many cases of chronic kidney disease and several types of cancer have been
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diagnosed in the inhabitants of Sri Lanka and South Carolina due to the consumption of
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uranium-contaminated groundwater.6, 7 As a result of its chemical and radio toxicities, the
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U.S Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the World Health Organization (WHO)
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have recommended the maximum contaminant level (MCL) for uranium around 30 ppb in
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drinking water.8 On the other hand, approximately 4 billion tons of uranium is naturally
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present in world oceans with average uranium concentration of ~3 ppb, which could be used
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for nuclear fuel for many years.9 Therefore, it is very important to capture and extract
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uranium for multiple benefits.
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Over the years, several remediation methods have been opted to recover uranium from
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nuclear waste including solvent extraction10, co-precipitation11, membrane filtration12,
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reductive precipitation13, and ion exchange/adsorption.14 Among these, the magnetic assisted
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chemical separation (MACS) is based on adsorption phenomenon in which magnetic micro
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particles (MMPs) are coated with solvent extractant to selectively recover radionuclides and
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toxic metals from industrial effluents.15 In this context, various adsorbents such as Cyanex
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923@MMPs16,
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DMDBTDMA@MMPs20 have been reported for aqueous uranium removal. However, these
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coated MMPs have small surface area (< 30 m2 g-1) and they are unable to sustain in acidic
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and radiation environments, resulting in low sorption capacity and secondary waste due to
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leaching of iron and coating materials.18, 21 Moreover, most of these adsorbents are tested in
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deionized water (DIW), which does not reflect the complex conditions of the real
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environment.
D2EHPA@MMPs17,
TOPO@MMPs18
CMPO@MMPs19,
and
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Magnetic mesoporous carbons (MMCs) have aroused great interest recently because they
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combine the properties of both the mesoporous carbon materials and the magnetic 4 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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nanomaterials, such as high surface area, tunable pore size, outstanding thermal and chemical
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stabilities, excellent biocompatibility, superparamagnetism, and the Néel relaxation effects.22,
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23
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guided drug delivery systems24, electromagnetic shielding25, magnetically recyclable
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adsorbents23, 26, and carriers for precious metal catalysts.27 However, due to the hydrophobic
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characteristic of MMCs they do not disperse well in water and adsorb mostly the organic
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pollutants.28 These issues can be tackled by the introduction of proper functional groups
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which can enhance the dispersibility and capability to remove a wide range of contaminants
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in aqueous media. Recent studies demonstrated that mesoporous carbons with different
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functional groups, i.e., the oxime29, phosphoryl30, and carboxyl31 could be used as adsorbents
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for uranium. Among the reported functionalities, most of them suffer from complex synthesis
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protocols, toxic nature of chemicals, long preparation time, low product yield, and high cost,
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which limit the use of such adsorbents. In addition, the separation of these adsorbents in the
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open environments is very difficult. In order to overcome the aforementioned challenges, it is
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highly desirable to develop a magnetically retrievable adsorbent that can selectively bind the
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uranium in real environmental waste samples and make the entire remediation processes
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simple, environmentally benign, rapid, and cost effective.
These multifunctional nanomaterials have promising applications including magnetically
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Organophosphorus compounds and their derivatives have been widely employed as
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UO22+ extracting agents due to their excellent coordination ability and stability in the harsh
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environments that are usually encountered in nuclear waste streams.32 In addition,
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phosphonate groups (C–PO(OH)2 or C–PO(OR)2) can be homogeneously incorporated on the
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variety of substrates including metal oxides due to the tendency to form P–O⋯M bonds with
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good hydrolytic stability.33 Motivated by these advantageous qualities, we aimed to
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synthesize the superparamagnetic adsorbent based on phosphonate anchored mesoporous
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carbon by a facile impregnation method. Herein, nitrilotris(methylene)triphosphonic acid 5 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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(NTMP) was used as a phosphonate precursor; it has industrial application in circulating
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water systems due to its excellent chelating and anti-scaling properties as well as ecologically
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benign nature.34 The prepared P-Fe-CMK-3 magnetic adsorbent was investigated as a
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uranium scavenger with respect to the associated isotherm, kinetics and the effects of pH,
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ionic strength, and reusability. In addition, its extraordinary selectivity towards uranium in
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real environmental solution samples (e.g., groundwater, radioactive wastewater and seawater)
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makes it one of the most powerful magnetic adsorbents ever reported.
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Materials and methods
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Materials
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Pluronic copolymer P123 (EO20PO70EO20, EO = ethylene oxide, PO = propylene oxide),
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NTMP solution (50 wt.% in H2O), Sucrose (99%), anhydrous FeCl3 (97%), and H2SO4 (98%)
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were purchased from Sigma–Aldrich. Ethylene Glycol (99%) and Tetraethyl orthosilicate
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(95%) were procured from Wako Chemicals. All other reagents used in the experiment and
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analysis were of analytical grade. The solutions were prepared with high-purity DIW (18.25
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MΩ cm-1) from a Millipore Milli-Q water purification system.
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Preparation of P-Fe-CMK-3
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First of all, a mesoporous silica, SBA-15 template was prepared as reported elsewhere.35
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Mesoporous carbon (CMK-3) was synthesized using an impregnation method as we
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previously reported.23 To incorporate the Fe3O4 nanoparticles (NPs) into mesopores, 100 mg
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of CMK-3 was added to 40 mL of ethanol solution containing 150 mg of anhydrous FeCl3.
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The resulting mixture was subjected to sonication and magnetic stirring at 60 °C to drive off
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solvent. Then, the impregnated carbon was dried in an oven at 30 °C overnight under
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vacuum. In order to obtain Fe-CMK-3, the prepared carbon powder was wetted by some
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drops of ethylene glycol and heat-treated in nitrogen flow at 510 °C for 1 h at a heating rate 6 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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of 5 °C min-1. Finally, Fe-CMK-3 was functionalized with phosphonates by stirring in 10 mL
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NTMP solution at 200 RPM for 2 hours using a mechanical shaker. After filtration and
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washing with DIW, the phosphonate-functionalized magnetic mesoporous carbon (P-Fe-
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CMK-3) was dried in an oven at 100 °C for 8 h. In addition, one sample of P-CMK-3 was
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prepared by treating the CMK-3 with NTMP solution under identical conditions. P-Fe-CMK-
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3 adsorbent was prepared in duplicate in 5 different batches. The overall scheme (Figure S1)
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for the synthesis of P-Fe-CMK-3 are presented in the Supporting Information (SI).
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Characterization
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Surface functional groups were analysed by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (iS50
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FTIR spectrometer equipped with diamond crystal, Thermo Scientific, USA). X-ray
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diffraction (XRD) patterns were collected on a Rigaku D/MAX-2500 V diffractometer with
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step size of 0.02° and 2θ ranging from 10 to 90°. The detailed methods (Text S1) are
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provided in the SI.
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Adsorption batch experiments
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A series of adsorption experiments were carried out at 25 °C in duplicate along with control
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samples. The initial screening of mesoporous carbon adsorbents at different stages of
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modification was assessed by dispersing 0.01 g of adsorbent into 50 mL of 20 mg L-1 UO22+
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solution (in DIW) in 50-mL propylene tubes at pH 4±0.1 and placed on a rotary agitator for
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24 h. (For more detail, see the Text S2).
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Desorption and regeneration experiments
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In order to regenerate the UO22+-loaded P-Fe-CMK-3 adsorbent, it was dispersed in 10 mL of
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0.5 M HCl solution and placed on a rotary agitator for 30 min. Then it was collected with a
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magnet, washed with DIW, and used for more adsorption experiments.
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Decontamination of environmental samples
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To demonstrate potential application of synthesized P-Fe-CMK-3 adsorbent in the
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decontamination of a complex environmental matrix, U solution was spiked in actual
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groundwater (from Yeoncheon, South Korea), seawater (from Pohang, South Korea), and in
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simulated radioactive wastewater (prepared by modification of previous method).29 The
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physicochemical properties and the composition of each sample are listed in the supporting
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information (Table S1). Breifly, 0.01 g of P-Fe-CMK-3 was added in 15-ml conical
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polypropyelene tube. A 10 mL of uranium spiked environmental solution was introduced in
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each tube and placed on rotary agitator at room temperature in duplicate along with control
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sample. After 4 hours of contact time, adsorbent was separated with magnet, filtered the
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remaining solution and analyzed on ICP-MS for UO22+ concentration.
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Results and discussion
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Characterization
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The TEM images of pristine and phosphonate grafted mesorporous carbons are shown in
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Figure 1a and 1b. The Figure 1c and 1d showed numerous, well dispersed Fe3O4
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nanoparticles (NPs) within the mesoporous carbon in the form of dark spots. However, the
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ordered stripe-like morphology of mesoporous carbon deteriorated to a small extent due to
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the in situ formation of magnetite NPs and additional treatment with NTMP. The average size
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of an encapsulated Fe3O4 NPs was about 10 nm (Figure 1e).
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By comparing the XPS (Figure S2a) survey scans of pristine mesoporous carbon, NTMP and
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P-Fe-CMK-3, it can be seen that the Fe 2p, N 1s, P 2p, and P 2s peaks are all present,
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suggesting that iron, nitrogen, and phosphorous elements are successfully incorporated in the
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P-Fe-CMK-3 adsorbent. However, in order to further investigate the grafting mechanism of
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phosphonate, high resolution XPS scans of P 2p, C 1s, O 1s, N 1s and Fe 2p on P-Fe-CMK-3
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were also recorded (Figure S2b-f). The relative contributions of individual components
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(Table S2) were quantified by a previously reported method.23 For the sake of reliable
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reference, the P 2p XPS spectrum of pure NTMP was collected (Figure S2b). The single P 2p
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peak is located at binding energy EB = 134.2 eV, which corresponds to pentavalent tetra-
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coordinated –PO3H2 acids.36 However, after the anchoring of phosphonate in P-Fe-CMK-3,
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the P 2p peak splits into two components at EB = 133.4 eV and EB = 134.5 eV. The slight
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shift of 0.8 eV towards the lower binding energy compared to pure NTMP indicates the
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deprotonation of terminal –POH groups, which leads to the formation of P-O-Fe bonds and/or
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C-P linkage.37 The peak at EB = 134.5 eV corresponds to the C-O-P bonding between
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magnetic mesoporous carbon and NTMP.37 The spectra of the C 1s peak and the O 1s peak in
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P-Fe-CMK-3 can be deconvoluted into four components and three components, respectively
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(Figure S2c and S2d). The carbon species represent C-C (EB = 284.4 eV), C-P (EB = 285.4
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eV), C-N (EB = 286.2 eV), and COO (EB = 288.9 eV).23 The oxygen species correspond to the
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formation of Fe-O-P and/or Fe-O-H (EB = 531.4 eV), P-OH (EB = 532.6 eV), and C-O-P
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linkage (EB = 533.5 eV).38 The N 1s core level in P-Fe-CMK-3 can be decomposed into two
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separate peaks: protonated amine peak, R3NH+ (EB = 402.4 eV) and deprotonated amine
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peak, R3N꞉ (EB = 400 eV) (Figure S2e).39 The two well resolved characteristic peaks at EB =
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713 eV and EB = 726 eV correspond to Fe 2p3/2 and Fe 2p1/2, respectively (Figure S2f).
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The FTIR spectra of pure NTMP (Figure S3a) displayed the characteristic bands around
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1200-1100 cm-1, 1015 cm-1 and 940 cm-1, which were attributed to the P=O stretching
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vibrations, O-P-O symmetric stretches and the P-O-H asymmetric stretches.34 However, after
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the grafting of phosphonate in P-Fe-CMK-3, a broad band appeared around 1040 cm-1,
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signifying that NTMP anchored through both P=O and P-O terminations with the surface 40,
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as previously indicated by the XPS results.
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The crystal structure and mineral formation of P-Fe-CMK-3 adsorbent was examined using
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x-ray diffraction and the results are shown in Figure S3b. The well-defined diffraction peaks
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located at 2θ regions of 18.2°, 30.3°, 35.6°, 43.3°, 53.8°, 57.3°, 62.8°, and 74.2° are attributed
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to (1 1 1), (2 2 0), (3 1 1), (4 0 0), (4 2 2), (5 1 1), (4 4 0), and (5 3 3) planes of Fe3O4,
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respectively, which corroborates well with standard magnetite (JCPDS No. 19-0629).23 In
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addition, there is a broad C (0 0 2) diffraction peak centered at 2θ regions of 20°–30°, which
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is ascribed to the mesoporous carbon.41
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The N2 adsorption–desorption isotherm (Figure S3c) of P-Fe-CMK-3 exhibited the typical
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type-IV hysteresis loop at (0.5 ≤ P/P0 ≤ 0.9), suggesting the presence of mesopores. The
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corresponding pore-size distribution derived from the adsorption branch using the Barrett–
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Joyner–Halenda (BJH) method (Figure S3c, inset) displayed a sharp peak in the mesoporous
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range centered on 5.5 nm. The average BET specific surface area (186.77 m2 g–1) and pore
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volume (0.054 cm3 g–1) of P-Fe-CMK-3 are significantly lower than those of the pristine
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mesoporous carbon due to the partial blocking of mesopores by Fe3O4 nanoparticles (Table
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S3).
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The isoelectric point (IEP) of P-Fe-CMK-3, Fe-CMK-3, P-CMK-3, and CMK-3 (Figure S3d)
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were interpreted by measuring the zeta potential (ξ) in solutions of different pHs (1.8 to 10).
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Sample P-Fe-CMK-3 has IEP = 3.2, lower than that of the pristine mesoporous carbon (IEP =
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4.1) with the difference of 0.9 unit, indicating that the surface of P-Fe-CMK-3 is grafted with
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NTMP, which makes it fit to adsorb UO22+ over a broad pH range.
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Previous studies demonstrated the use of magnetization curves for the quantification of
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amounts of organic compounds grafted on the magnetic particles.42 Herein, the saturation
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magnetization strengths (Ms) of Fe-CMK-3 and P-Fe-CMK-3 are found to be 13.86 and 5.20
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emu g-1, respectively (Figure S3e). The difference of 8.66 emu g-1 suggests that the NTMP
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content in P-Fe-CMK-3 is ~62.50 % (w/w). In addition, the P-Fe-CMK-3 adsorbent exhibited
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almost negligible coercivity (Hc) of 1 Oe and remanence (Mr) of ~0.05 emu g-1, which
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signifies the superparamagnetic nature of the adsorbent. Above all, it is clear that P-Fe-CMK-
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3 can be recovered from the solution by exposure to an external magnet (Figure S3e, inset
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photo).
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The TGA thermograms of Fe-CMK-3 and P-Fe-CMK-3 yielded a small weight loss (5-10
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wt.%) below 200 °C, due to physisorbed water molecules (Figure S3f). The TGA data
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inferred the higher thermal stability of P-Fe-CMK-3 than Fe-CMK-3. In addition, the degree
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of phosphonate grafting could be evaluated quantitatively as 1.42 mmol g−1 in the
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temperature range of 200−800 °C.
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Adsorption of U
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The adsorptive capability of four different mesoporous carbon adsorbents towards UO22+ is
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depicted in Figure 2a. The pristine mesoporous carbon (CMK-3) adsorbed relatively less
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UO22+ (10 mg g-1) while the magnetic mesoporous carbon (Fe-CMK-3) was found to be
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inefficient for UO22+ capture, as it adsorbed only 2 mg g-1. This fivefold difference in
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adsorption might be due to the higher IEP of Fe-CMK-3 (4.8) and the loss of complex-
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forming hydrophilic groups during the synthesis at higher temperatures.43 In contrast, a
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substantial increase in UO22+ adsorption (60 mg g-1) was observed after the treatment of Fe-
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CMK-3 by NTMP. The thirtyfold increase in UO22+ adsorption is presumably attributed to 11 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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the lower IEP (3.2) of P-Fe-CMK-3 as well as the abundant phosphonate, containing
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chelating ligands on its surface. Another striking observation was the excellent adsorption of
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UO22+ (82 mg g-1) by P-CMK-3, which was further confirmed by the incorporation of
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phosphonate groups on the mesoporous carbon resulting in the lowest IEP (2.8). Therefore,
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on the basis of adsorbed UO22+, the synthesized mesoporous carbon adsorbents could be
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arranged in the following order: P-CMK-3 > P-Fe-CMK-3 > CMK-3 > Fe-CMK-3.
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Considering the magnetic sensitivity and the relatively higher UO22+ adsorption, the P-Fe-
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CMK-3 adsorbent was investigated for further UO22+ capture studies.
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Adsorption kinetics
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A small equilibration time is highly desirable in terms of real application of adsorbent
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materials, resulting in a small reactor volume, short operation cycle, and thereby low
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operation and investment costs. Considering these factors, the effect of contact time on the
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adsorption of UO22+ onto P-Fe-CMK-3 was explored to determine the equilibration time
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(Figure 2b). The uptake of UO22+ was ultra-fast, especially in the first few minutes: the
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removal efficiency was >85% in the initial 5 min. The overall sorption process reached a
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steady state within 30 minutes. The equilibration time in this case was much shorter than
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those of 504 h in MPCOF44, 144 h in MMSNs45, and 72 h in S2-LDH.46 To shed light on the
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sorption process, the experimental data were fitted with pseudo-first-order and pseudo-
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second-order kinetic models, respectively (Figure 2b, inset).
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The pseudo-second-order kinetic reaction was the better fitting model due to the higher
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correlation coefficient (R2 = 0.98) which indicates that chemical adsorption is the rate
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limiting step for UO22+ adsorption onto P-Fe-CMK-3.
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Effect of pH
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The solution pH is a major operational factor in sorption process as it affects the solution
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chemistry of metal ions and the charge on the sorbent surface. Adsorption affinity of UO22+
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by P-Fe-CMK-3 over a broad concentration range of HNO3 (2 M to pH = 6.48) is shown in
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Figure 2c. In general, adsorption of UO22+ tends to increase with decrease in acidity. This
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adsorption behavior might be predicted by the pH effect on the entire surface charge of P-Fe-
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CMK-3 and the proton-competitive environment. On the basis of IEP (3.2) of P-Fe-CMK-3,
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when pH < 3.2, the phosphonate functional groups of NTMP were more positively charged
288
due to intense competition between protons (H+) and UO22+ for the same binding sites. As a
289
result, strong electrostatic repulsion was a major factor for lower retention of UO22+ at lower
290
pH. On the contrary, when pH > 3.2, the P-Fe-CMK-3 surface became less positively
291
charged, revealing that the phosphonate functional groups were active in adsorbing UO22+.
292
Taking into consideration of the acid dissociation constant of NTMP (Figure S4a), when pH
4.48 In addition, the Figure S4b
308
showed the formation of schoepite (UO3·2H2O) precipitates in the pH range of ~5.4-7.2,
309
which could be plausible reason of high sorption capacity at pH > 5. To overcome this issue,
310
further sorption experiments were conducted at pH 4. In general, for any adsorbent, the Kd
311
value > 5 × 103 mL g-1 is considered good and the Kd value > 5 × 104 mL g-1 is considered
312
excellent.49 In our case, the high Kd values, ranged from 8.5 × 103 to 9.9 × 104 mL g-1 in the
313
pH range of 3.68 to 6.48 clearly indicate the effective removal of uranium in acidic and
314
neutral conditions.
315
Effect of ionic strength
316
As environmental solution (such as seawater or radioactive wastewater) involves various
317
ionic species, it is essential to test the effect of ionic strength on UO22+ adsorption. The
318
results (Figure 2d) show a slight decrease of UO22+ adsorption with increase in ionic strength.
319
This small reduction in adsorption might be expected from the competition of Na+ ions with
320
UO22+ for the active binding sites. However, the overall adsorption efficacy of UO22+ was not
321
significantly different at either extreme condition, indicating that the dominant adsorption
322
mechanism would be inner-sphere surface complexation rather than outer-sphere surface
323
complexation or ion exchange process. This postulate would be supported by previous studies
324
which demonstrated that UO22+ adsorption by inner-sphere complexes was independent of
325
ionic strength.50 Therefore, our results predict the formation of stable chelates between
326
phosphonate groups and UO22+ on the surface of P-Fe-CMK-3.
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Adsorption isotherm
328
It is essential for understanding the adsorption mechanism, the surface properties, and
329
quantitative comparison of the sorption capacity of different materials.2 To investigate the
330
maximum UO22+ uptake capacity of P-Fe-CMK-3 adsorbent, the equilibrium sorption data
331
were fitted with Langmuir and Freundlich isotherm models, respectively. More details can be
332
found as Text S3 in the SI.
333
Both the models approximated the experimental UO22+ adsorption data well (Figure 2e).
334
However, according to the correlation coefficient (R2) values, it can be seen that there is
335
better agreement between adsorption data and the Freundlich model, indicating that UO22+
336
adsorption can be attributed to multilayer coverage. In other words, the entire adsorbent
337
surface is heterogeneous and there is significant lateral interaction among adsorbed molecules.
338
The maximum UO22+ adsorption capacity (Qmax) of P-Fe-CMK-3 was 150 mg g-1, which is
339
much better than other magnetic adsorbents and comparable to other non-magnetic
340
adsorbents (Table S4).
341
Comparison between radioactive uranium and non-radioactive heavy metals
342
To compare the reactivity of P-Fe-CMK-3 adsorbent between UO22+ and the heavy metals
343
(As5+, Cd2+, Cr6+, Cu2+, Ni2+, Hg2+, Pb2+ and Zn2+), an additional set of experiments was
344
conducted under the identical experiment conditions (Figure 2f). It was found that the P-Fe-
345
CMK-3 adsorbent had higher adsorption affinity towards UO22+ as compared to the other
346
heavy metals. This selectivity was contributed by several factors such as i) HSAB principle
347
which states uranyl is hard acid and prefer to bind hard bases (O over S, N over P)3 , ii) f
348
orbitals of uranium interact more strongly with donor ligands than the d orbitals of the heavy
349
metals51, iii) UO22+ competes with H+ to bond with either P=O or P–O– oxygen atoms within
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350
phosphonate functional groups. The coordinating ability of neutral P=O group arises by the
351
donation of lone pairs of electrons to unoccupied molecular orbitals of UO22+ whereas,
352
negative charge on the P–O– group interacts with UO22+ through electrostatic forces, and iv)
353
UO22+ has a linear structure (O=U=O) unlike the common heavy metals which exists in their
354
divalent forms (M2+) at low pH except As5+, and Cr6+ which predominantly exists in their
355
anionic forms such as H2AsO4- and HCrO4-, respectively So, due to difference in charge and
356
structure, the linear UO22+ ion could be better accommodated by the phosphonate chelating
357
groups and the mesopores in P-Fe-CMK-3.
358
The selectivity coefficient for uranyl ions with respect to competing ions is determined as:
/ =
359
and !"
(1)
360
where !"
361
respectively in the aqueous solution. The coressponding data (Figure 2f , inset) presents
362
desirable selectivity towards uranyl over the range of competing metal ions.
363
Uranium removal from real environmental samples
364
As a result of the excellent UO22+ capture by P-Fe-CMK-3 described above, we investigated
365
the potential applicability of this nano-adsorbent to remediation of natural solution samples
366
spiked with UO22+ (Table S5). The first test was decontamination of groundwater (pH = 7.8)
367
sampled from Yeoncheon, South Korea, which contained diverse ions such as Ca2+ (59 ppm),
368
Na+ (17.6 ppm), Mg2+ (8.3 ppm), K+ (2.7 ppm), Cl− (39 ppm), SO42− (9 ppm), and NO3− (5.4
369
ppm). Here, 948 ppb of UO22+ was spiked in the groundwater sample. Almost 99.1% of
370
UO22+ was removed with an excellent distribution coefficient (Kd = 1.07 × 105 mL g-1).
371
Among natural waters, seawater is one of the most challenging matrices due to its high ionic
are the distribution coefficients for uranyl and competing ions,
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strength. The seawater (pH = 8, collected from Pohang, South Korea) contained a very low
373
level of naturally occurring uranium (2.90 ppb) and extremely high contents of common ions
374
such as Ca2+ (400 ppm), Na+ (10,475 ppm), Mg2+ (1,247 ppm), K+ (387 ppm), Cl− (18,800
375
ppm), and SO42− (2,634 ppm). The P-Fe-CMK-3 adsorbent captured up to ~69% of UO22+
376
from seawater within four hours. Moreover, an additional experiment was carried out by
377
adding 450 ppb of UO22+ to similar seawater; the removal efficiency was > 91% with high Kd
378
value of 1.02 × 104 mL g-1. The use of P-Fe-CMK-3 was further extended to UO22+ recovery
379
from radioactive wastewater. The radioactive wastewater (pH = 4) contained Co2+ (119 ppm),
380
Ni2+ (123.6 ppm), Mn2+ (113.7 ppm), Na+ (162.1 ppm), Zn2+ (124.6 ppm), Sr2+ (45 ppm),
381
Cr3+ (85.5 ppm), Cs+ (120 ppm), and UO22+ (290 ppb). Again, P-Fe-CMK-3 showed high
382
adsorption efficacy > 96% with Kd value close to 3 × 104 mL g-1 in 4 h. These UO22+ removal
383
results were far better than those of the previous adsorbents in terms of their application in
384
complex environmental matrices and fast kinetics.
385
Removal Mechanism
386
In general, the removal of metal at the surface of solid sorbent can be predicted due to various
387
probable mechanisms such as surface precipitation, ion exchange, adsorption, co-
388
precipitation, absorption, diffusion, etc. The elemental mapping images showed
389
homogeneous distribution of C, N, O, Fe, P, and U on the surface of UO22+-loaded P-Fe-
390
CMK-3 (Figure 3a), suggesting strong evidence of uranium adsorption. In order to examine
391
the mode of interaction between UO22+ and the P-Fe-CMK-3 at the molecular scale, XPS
392
scans of the P-Fe-CMK-3 after uranium adsorption were collected (denoted as U-P-Fe-CMK-
393
3). The wide XPS scan (Figure 3b) represents the expected components of P-Fe-CMK-3 with
394
the addition of two U 4f peaks, which confirms a significant amount of uranium at the
395
adsorbent surface. The XPS spectra of U 4f can be resolved by a single contribution of
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396
uranium with U 4f5/2 (EB = 393.4 eV) and U 4f7/2 (EB = 382.6 eV), suggesting the absence of
397
redox activity during the adsorption process (Figure 3c).14 After the UO22+ adsorption, the
398
deconvoluted P 2p peaks shift slightly towards lower binding energy (Figure 3d). In addition,
399
a small peak appears at EB = 133.2 eV due to the U-O-P bonding, which is in agreement with
400
the UO22+ adsorption onto tributyl-phosphate-grafted CNTs.52 From Figure 3e, it is noted that
401
the protonated amine (R3NH+) species is more concentrated than deprotonated amine (R3N꞉)
402
on the adsorbent surface due to the synthesis of P-Fe-CMK-3 in the NTMP solution at pH 0.3
403
where R3NH+ is the dominant species (in solution, for amine groups, 9 ≤ pKa ≤12). However,
404
in U-P-Fe-CMK-3, the deprotonated amine peak (R3N꞉) is shifted towards higher binding
405
energy at EB = 400.6 eV with augmented intensity (25.56%). This change could be attributed
406
to the formation of complexes between N(CH2)33- of NTMP and UO22+, in which UO22+
407
shares the electrons with the nitrogen atoms in P-Fe-CMK-3. It is worth noting here that the
408
final pH is always less than the initial pH after the UO22+adsorption, which correlates
409
positively with the increased R3N꞉ peak intensity. Based on the detailed XPS analysis, the
410
uranium adsorption is attributed to the simultaneous interaction of nitrogen and phosphonate
411
functional groups, which promotes the formation of strong complexes with UO22+ on the P-
412
Fe-CMK-3 nanostructure (Figure 4a).
413
Regeneration and reusability
414
The desorption of metal ions from the saturated adsorbents is necessary from economic and
415
industrial perspectives. In the present case, keeping in view of the relatively lower adsorption
416
capability of P-Fe-CMK-3 in extremely acidic conditions, we used a 0.5 M HCl solution to
417
desorb UO22+ from the adsorbent. According to the results (Figure 4b), there was no serious
418
loss in the UO22+ adsorption efficiency (99.67% to 99.16%) over five consecutive adsorption-
419
desorption steps, representing excellent regeneration and reusability. Even after five cycles,
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420
P-Fe-CMK-3 retained its magnetic property and could be retrieved from the solution within 1
421
minute. In addition, the leaching of iron from the adsorbent after a contact time of 24 h in
422
different pH solutions (1 to 10) was nearly 0, suggesting that the iron cores were well
423
protected by the mesoporous carbons. Figure S5 compares the powder XRD data of fresh,
424
adsorbed and regenerated adsorbent after five cycles and no substantial structural changes
425
occurred upon the five cycles which approves adsorbents stability. In addition, the TEM
426
(Figure S6) and the corresponding mapping of individual elements in P-Fe-CMK-3 after five
427
consecutive adsorption desorption runs also attributes to chemical and structural stabilities.
428
429
430
Comparison of P-Fe-CMK-3 with other materials
431
Although numerous studies have been conducted for the effective removal of uranium by
432
various adsorbents as presented in Table S4, the majority of those studies use DIW as the
433
background solution, which does not represent actual environmental characteristics.
434
Therefore, the application potential of those materials in real world is still very limited. In
435
contrast to the previous studies describing high adsorption capacities for UO22+ from trivial
436
aqueous samples, the representative case studies of different adsorbents have been compared
437
(Table S5) in terms of real application and their performance.
438
In general, nano-scale zero valent iron (nZVI) is predominantly used for the remediation of
439
various recalcitrant pollutants including UO22+ in real environmental solutions. However,
440
there are certain issues associated with the nZVI use, such as aggregation, non-reusability,
441
and longer reaction time, i.e., > 10 days for 75% removal of uranium in a concentration range
442
of 20 to 1000 mg L-1 in contaminated water.53 There are several other materials, including 19 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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443
banana peels nano-sorbent (BPN)54, IRA-910, and Dowex for the UO22+ recovery from mine
444
solutions.55 However, these have low removal efficiency (≤ 70%) and it is difficult to
445
separate them after treatment. Moreover, these materials take longer to reach equilibrium,
446
which may restrict their industrial application. Silica- and zeolites-based materials offer
447
higher retention capability for UO22+, but these materials tend to dissolve easily in alkaline
448
conditions with consequent loss of UO22+ uptake capacity. On the other hand, despite
449
extensive studies, the use of graphene-based adsorbents in the real world is still being debated
450
due to its toxic concern.56 Recently, K2xSn4−xS8−x57, FJSM-SnS58, S4-LDH46, PA/TNTs59,
451
zirconium phosphonates60, CMK-3@PDA61, and Oxime-CMK529 have been reported for
452
effective removal of UO22+. However, most of them are in the form of very fine powder
453
and/or microcrystalline, and thus are unsuitable for the use in membrane or column filtration
454
because they tend to choke filter pores. In addition, these materials have lower adsorption
455
efficiency in real environmental samples. In contrast, the P-Fe-CMK-3 adsorbent is highly
456
selective, magnetically separable, and has excellent recycling efficacy, all of which make it a
457
valuable new method for nuclear waste remediation.
458
459
Conclusion
460
Based on the hard soft acid base (HSAB) concept, the strong UO22+ interaction with the P=O
461
moieties and the persistence of this coordination in harsh acidic and radiolytic conditions, for
462
the first time we presented the synthesis of phosphonate grafted magnetic mesoporous carbon
463
(P-Fe-CMK-3) by the facile impregnation method. The P-Fe-CMK-3 adsorbent selectively
464
retains UO22+ over a broader range of pH levels (pH -0.3 to 6.48) than the existing adsorbents.
465
It also showed maximum adsorption capacity of ~150 mg g-1 at pH 4±0.1, higher than the
466
other adsorbents reported so far. The adsorbent reached a steady state in only 30 minutes and
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467
was easily retrieved in one minute using a magnetic field without causing serious radiation
468
exposure to radiological workers. Above all, the adsorbent was highly effective for the
469
capture of uranyl species from the complex environmental matrices (including radioactive
470
wastewater, groundwater and seawater samples) within a short time (4 h), unlike most of
471
other adsorbents with longer time up to 67 h. The detailed surface analysis by XPS and the
472
insignificant influence of ionic strength suggested that the UO22+ adsorption is due to the
473
synergistic interaction of nitrogen and phosphonate functional groups with the uranium
474
contaminant on P-Fe-CMK-3. Consequently, P-Fe-CMK-3 can be used as a promising
475
adsorbent with ecological benignity, stability and magnetic retrievability for the remediation
476
of uranium from environmental waste solutions.
477 478 479 480 481 482 483
Acknowledgement
484
This work was supported by ‘‘The GAIA Project” by the Korea Ministry of Environment
485
[RE201402059]. This research was also supported by the National Research Foundation of
486
Korea (NRF) grant funded by the Korean government (MSIP: Ministry of Science, ICT and
487
Future Planning) (No. NRF-2016R1D1A1B02013310). The authors also thankful to Dr.
488
Wonseok Kim for providing experimental facility and uranium analysis.
489
Supporting Information
490
Synthesis protocol, experimental design, detailed structural characterization and
491
corresponding results (XPS, FTIR, XRD, BET, PSD, ξ-potential, Magnetic properties, and 21 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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492
TGA) for the prepared adsorbent, Physicochemical properties of real environmental samples,
493
percentage distribution of U(VI) and NTMP ligand and the comparison of the synthesized
494
adsorbent with other adsorbents.
495
This material is available free of charge via the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org.
496 497 498 499 500 501 502 503 504
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686 687 688 689 690
Figure Captions
691
Figure 1 (a,b) TEM of CMK-3 and P-CMK-3, (c,d) TEM and (e) HR-TEM images of P-Fe-
692
CMK-3 adsorbent.
693
Figure 2. (a) UO22+ adsorption comparison among different mesoporous carbon adsorbents;
694
(b) Effect of contact time on UO22+ adsorption by P-Fe-CMK-3 and corresponding kinetic
695
parameters; Effects of solution pH (c) and ionic strength (d) on UO22+ adsorption by P-Fe-
696
CMK-3; (e) Langmuir and Freundlich isotherms curve fitting and corresponding parameters
697
for UO22+ adsorption by P-Fe-CMK-3; (f) Reactivity comparison among heavy metals (inset,
698
selectivity coefficient for uranyl ions realative to competing ions)
699
Figure 3. (a) FE-SEM EDS analysis and elemental mapping; (b) XPS survey scan of UO22+-
700
adsorbed P-Fe-CMK-3; High resolution deconvoluted XPS of U 4f (c), P 2p (d) and N 1s (e).
701
Figure 4. (a) Proposed removal mechanism of UO22+ on P-Fe-CMK-3; (b) UO22+ adsorption
702
performance over five regeneration cycles on P-Fe-CMK-3 with initial UO22+ concentration
703
of 2.2 ppm.
704
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705 706 707 708 709 710
711 712 713 714 715
Figure 1 (a,b) TEM of CMK-3 and P-CMK-3, (c,d) TEM and (e) HR-TEM images of P-Fe-
716
CMK-3 adsorbent.
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amount of UO2+ adsorbed (mg g-1) 2
adsorbed UO2+ (mg g-1) 2
719 720
a
80
60
40
20
60
CMK-3
b
50
Experimental Pseudo I order Pseudo II order
40 30
Pseudo I parameters qe (mg g-1) k1(mg g-1) R2 56 1.30 0.94 Pseudo II parameters -1 -1 -1 qe (mg g ) k2(g mg min ) R2 57.93 0.03 0.98
20 10
0
Fe-CMK-3 P-Fe-CMK-3 P-CMK-3
50
100
4
80
10
60
10
40
102
20
101
0
0
3
1M
1.1
2
3.68
4.75
6.48
d
40 30 20 10
0
1
10
100
500
1000
Concentration of NaCl (mM)
140
1.0E4
e
200
Langmuir parameters KL (L g-1)
Qm (mg g-1)
R2
0.029
150±4.70
0.973
2+ 2
SUO
Kd (mL g-1)
Experimental Langmuir Freundlich
100
/M n+
8.0E3
80
f
250
120
6.0E3
150 100 50
4.0E3 2+ Pb2+ Cd Cr6+ Cu2+ Ni2+
Freundlich parameters
60
n
KF (mg g -1)
R2
3.4
26±2.50
0.98
Hg2+ As5+ Zn2+
2.0E3
40
0.0
0
723
250
50
Acidity / Final pH
722
200
0
10
2M
150
60
adsorbed UO2+ (mg g-1) 2
Capacity Kd
Kd (mL g-1)
Adsorption capacity (mg g-1)
105
c
58
Time (min)
721 100
Saturation Capacity qe (mg g-1)
0
0
Qe (mg g-1)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research
100
200 Ce (mg L-1)
300
6+
2+ UO2+ Cr Pb2+ Cd 2
Cu2+ Ni2+ Hg2+
2+ As5+ Zn
724
Figure 2. (a) UO22+ adsorption comparison among different mesoporous carbon adsorbents;
725
(b) Effect of contact time on UO22+ adsorption by P-Fe-CMK-3 and corresponding kinetic
726
parameters; Effects of solution pH (c) and ionic strength (d) on UO22+ adsorption by P-Fe-
727
CMK-3; (e) Langmuir and Freundlich isotherms curve fitting and corresponding parameters
728
for UO22+ adsorption by P-Fe-CMK-3; (f) Reactivity comparison among heavy metals (inset,
729
selectivity coefficient for uranyl ions realative to competing ions)
730
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731 732 733
a
734 735 736 737
738
c
U-P-Fe-CMK-3
739
C 1s
O 1s
740 Fe 2p
N 1s
U 4f
741
P 2s P 2p
800
600
400
200
0
B.E (eV)
742
d
e
743 744 745 746 747
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748
Figure 3. (a) FE-SEM EDS analysis and elemental mapping; (b) XPS survey scan of UO22+-
749
adsorbed P-Fe-CMK-3; High resolution deconvoluted XPS of U 4f (c), P 2p (d) and N 1s (e).
750 751 752 753 754 755
a
HO
O
P
756
C M
N P
O
C
758
O
P
O
M
OH
757
C
759 760
OH
HO
M
b
100
761 762 763
% UO2+ adsoprtion 2
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
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50
764 765
0
1
2
3
4
5
Cycle
766 767
Figure 4. (a) Proposed removal mechanism of UO22+ on P-Fe-CMK-3; (b) UO22+ adsorption
768
performance over five regeneration cycles on P-Fe-CMK-3 with initial UO22+ concentration
769
of 2.2 ppm.
33 ACS Paragon Plus Environment