4.5 Article

Solvent extraction of thorium(IV) and rare earth elements with novel polyaramide extractant containing preorganized chelating groups

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL TECHNOLOGY AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 88, Issue 10, Pages 1930-1936

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jctb.4055

Keywords

polyaramide; solvent extraction; hydrogen bond; thorium; rare earth

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation [21172158]
  2. NSAF [11076018]
  3. Sichuan Province Science and Technology Support Programme [2011FZ0048]
  4. Doctoral Program of the Ministry of Education of China [20090181110047]
  5. National Fund of China for Fostering Talents in Basic Science [J1210004]
  6. Major Research Plan of the National Natural Science Foundation of China [91026022]

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BACKGROUNDOligoamides containing intramolecular hydrogen bonds have proved to be excellent extractants for metal cations, but their polymeric counterparts have never been used. Thorium separation from rare earth elements has long been a research subject due to its importance in nuclear energy and metallurgy. In this work a novel polyaramide has been synthesized and investigated for solvent extraction and separation of thorium and rare earths. RESULTSThe synthesized polymer 1 [(C32H46N2O6)(n)], shows a high extractability of 89.4% towards Th(IV) compared with only 36-48% for rare earths. The optimized pH value for extraction of Th(IV) was 3.97. At C-1/C-M = 2.0, the extraction for Th(IV) reached 95.1%. When adding NaNO3, the separation of Th(IV) from La(III) is more efficient than that from Eu(III) or Yb(III), especially at higher NaNO3 concentration. Th(IV) can be thoroughly stripped from organic phase at 1.50molL(-1) HNO3 concentration. CONCLUSIONDirect condensation of aromatic diamine and diacid led to a novel polyaramide with introverted chelating groups. Selective extraction of Th(IV) with respect to rare earths was observed and the extraction was an endothermic process. The salting-out agent and C-1/C-M ratio can affect the separation efficiency. Thus, the polymer 1 may be a potential candidate for separating thorium and rare earths under specified conditions. (c) 2013 Society of Chemical Industry

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