4.6 Article

Surface functionalized manganese ferrite nanocrystals for enhanced uranium sorption and separation in water

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY A
Volume 3, Issue 43, Pages 21930-21939

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c5ta04406e

Keywords

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Funding

  1. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers [W912HZ-13-2-0009-P00001]
  2. ACS Petroleum Research Fund [52640-DNI10]
  3. US National Science Foundation [CBET 1437820]
  4. U.S. National Science Foundation [EAR-1161543]
  5. National Science Foundation [ECS-0335765]

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Developments in nanoscale engineering now allow for molecular scale optimization of reactivity, sorption, and magnetism, among other properties, for advanced, material-based environmental applications, including sorption, separation, and sensing of radionuclides. Herein, we describe novel, monodisperse nanoscale manganese ferrite crystals (MnFe2O4) for ultra-high capacity environmental sorption and subsequent separation of uranyl in water. System optimization was explored as a function of nanocrystal (core) composition, surface coating(s), and water chemistry. 11 nm MnFe2O4 nanocrystals, which were colloidally stabilized via engineered oleyl-based surface bilayers, demonstrate extreme, yet specific, uranium binding capacities while remaining monomerically stable under environmentally relevant conditions (water chemistries), which are key for application. In particular, MnFe2O4 cores with oleyl phosphate (as the outer facing layer) bilayers demonstrate preferential uranium binding of >150% (uranium weight)/(particle system weight) while being highly water stable in elevated ionic strengths/types and pH (up to 235.4 ppm (10.24 mM) of NaCl and 51.3 ppm (1.28 mM) of CaCl2, in addition to 60 ppm of uranyl, pH 5-9). Further, when normalized for size and surface coatings, MnFe2O4 nanocrystals had significantly enhanced sorption capacities compared to Mn2FeO4, Fe3O4 and manganese oxide core analogs. Mechanistically, we demonstrate that observed uranium sorption enhancement is due not only to thermodynamically favorable interfacial interactions (for both particle and selected bilayer coatings), but also due to significant uranyl reduction at the particle interface itself. Uranium sorption capacities for optimized systems described are the highest of any material reported to date.

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