4.8 Article

Two-Dimensional Imprinting Strategy to Create Specific Nanotrap for Selective Uranium Adsorption with Ultrahigh Capacity

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 14, Issue 7, Pages 9408-9417

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.1c20543

Keywords

two-dimensional imprinting; specific nanotraps; uranium; adsorption; nuclear energy

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [U1867206, 22176138]
  2. National Key Research and Development Program of Magnetic Confined Fusion Energy [2017YFE0300302]
  3. Priority Academic Program Development of Jiangsu Higher Education Institutions (PAPD)

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This study adopts a two-dimensional imprinting strategy to design 2D imprinted networks with specific nanotraps for effective uranium capture. The as-prepared adsorbents possess tailored 2D nanotraps open and specific to uranyl, showing excellent selectivity, high adsorption capacity, and good regeneration performance for uranium. This pioneering strategy of 2D imprinting networks has significant implications for material design in various fields.
Uranium extraction is highly challenging because of low uranium concentration, high salinity, and a large number of competing ions in different environments. The template strategy is developed to address the defect of poor selectivity, but the adsorption capacity is limited by cavity blocking during the preparation of materials. Herein, a two-dimensional (2D) imprinting strategy is adopted to design 2D imprinted networks with specific nanotraps for effective uranium capture. The imprinted networks are established through the condensation polymerization of uranyl complexes, which are formed by aromatic building units coordinating with uranyl ions on the equatorial plane. Different from traditional imprinting materials that contain many invalid cavities (buried cavities or unreleased cavities), the as-prepared adsorbents possess tailored 2D nanotraps, which are open and specific to uranyl. Thus, the optimized networks not only show excellent selectivity for uranium (K-d = 964,500 mL/g in multi-ion solution) and slight disturbance of high salinity but also possess an ultrahigh adsorption capacity of 1365.7 mg/g. In addition, this adsorbent shows a high extraction efficiency for uranium under a wide range of pH conditions and exhibits good regeneration performance. This work proposes a pioneering strategy of 2D imprinting networks to capture uranium specifically with high capacity and can be applied to material design in many other fields.

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