Alkaline conditioning of the amidoxime based adsorbents is a significant step in the preparation of the adsorbent
for uranium uptake from seawater. The effects of various alkaline conditioning parameters such as the type of alkaline reagent,
reaction temperature, and reaction time were investigated with respect to uranium adsorption capacity from simulated seawater
(spiked with 8 ppm uranium) and natural seawater (from Sequim Bay, WA). An adsorbent (AF1) was prepared at the Oak Ridge
National Laboratory by radiation-induced graft polymerization (RIGP) with acrylonitrile and itaconic acid onto high-surface-area
polyethylene fibers. For the AF1 adsorbent, sodium hydroxide emerged as a better reagent for alkaline conditioning over
potassium hydroxide, which has typically been used in previous studies, because of higher uranium uptake capacity and lower cost
over the other candidate alkaline reagents investigated in this study. Use of sodium hydroxide in place of potassium hydroxide is
shown to result in a 21-30% decrease in the cost of uranium recovery.
Revised: September 27, 2016 |
Published: April 20, 2016
Citation
Das S., W. Liao, M. Flicker Byers, C. Tsouris, C.J. Janke, R.T. Mayes, and E. Schneider, et al. 2016.Alternative Alkaline Conditioning of Amidoxime Based Adsorbent for Uranium Extraction from Seawater.Industrial and Engineering Chemistry Research 55, no. 15:4303-4312.PNNL-SA-120372.doi:10.1021/acs.iecr.5b03210