A new series of adsorbents (AI10 through AI17) were successfully developed at ORNL by radiation induced graft
polymerization (RIGP) of acrylonitrile (AN) and vinylphosphonic acid (VPA) (at different mole to mole ratios) onto high
surface area polyethylene fiber, with high degrees of grafting (DOG) varying from 110 to 300%. The grafted nitrile groups were
converted to amidoxime groups by reaction with 5 wt % hydroxylamine at 80 °C for 72 h. The amidoximated adsorbents were
then conditioned with 0.44 M KOH at 80 °C followed by screening at ORNL with prescreening brine spiked with 8 ppm
uranium. Uranium adsorption capacities in prescreening ranged from 171 to 187 g-U/kg-ads irrespective of percent DOG. The
performance of the adsorbents with respect to uranium adsorption in natural seawater was also investigated using flow-throughcolumn
testing at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL). Three hours of KOH conditioning led to higher uranium
uptake than 1 h of conditioning. The adsorbent AI11, containing AN and VPA at the mole ratio of 3.52, emerged as the potential
candidate for the highest uranium adsorption (3.35 g-U/kg-ads.) after 56 days of exposure in seawater flow-through-columns.
The rate of vanadium adsorption over uranium linearly increased throughout the 56 days of exposure. The total mass of
vanadium uptake was ~5 times greater than uranium after 56 days.
Revised: September 27, 2016 |
Published: April 20, 2016
Citation
Das S., Y. Oyola, R.T. Mayes, C.J. Janke, L. Kuo, G.A. Gill, and J.R. Wood, et al. 2016.Extracting Uranium from Seawater: Promising AI Series Adsorbents.Industrial and Engineering Chemistry Research 55, no. 15:4103-4109.PNNL-SA-120256.doi:10.1021/acs.iecr.5b03135