4.6 Article

Uranium Resource Recovery from Desalination Plant Feed and Reject Water Using Amidoxime Functionalized Adsorbent

Journal

INDUSTRIAL & ENGINEERING CHEMISTRY RESEARCH
Volume 57, Issue 50, Pages 17237-17244

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.iecr.8b04673

Keywords

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Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Nuclear Energy
  2. PNNL [DE-AC05-76RL01830]
  3. ORNL [DE-AC05-00OR22725]
  4. Nuclear Energy University Program [14-6789]
  5. Department of Energy

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With global demand for nuclear power expected to rise, new nuclear fuel resources must be explored to ensure the viability and sustainability of nuclear power. Uranium recovery from seawater is one potential source, though the low concentration of uranium in seawater is a significant obstacle. As a concentrate of seawater, desalination brine reject would have a significantly higher uranyl concentration. In this work, the adsorption of uranium and competing ions in brine reject is investigated. Adsorption experiments were performed over 84 days in 5-gallon batch tanks with amidoxime adsorbents and samples taken from the feed seawater and reverse osmosis brine reject of the Tampa Bay Desalination Plant. The aqueous concentration and adsorbed mass of uranium, zinc, copper, iron, vanadium, calcium, and magnesium were determined through inductively coupled plasma mass spectroscopy. Aqueous adsorption modeling was used to simulate speciation and adsorption of these ions under the experimental conditions. The adsorbed mass of uranium in seawater was 6.22 mg/g adsorbent which declined to 3.95 mg/g in brine. This is a result of increased competition from iron and vanadium whose adsorbed masses increased from 1.06 to 3.00 mg/g and 1.05 to 2.67 mg/g, respectively. Good agreement between experimental and predicted results was obtained for all ions in seawater. Uranium adsorption was overpredicted in brine which may be attributed to the presence of other competing ions and the system not being at equilibrium. Results demonstrate that the influence of competing ions, such as those of iron and vanadium, on uranium adsorption would need to be reduced for brine reject to become a significant uranium resource.

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