4.8 Article

Encapsulating Amidoximated Nanofibrous Aerogels within Wood Cell Tracheids for Efficient Cascading Adsorption of Uranium Ions

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 16, Issue 8, Pages 13144-13151

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.2c06173

Keywords

nanowood; cascading filtration; cellulose nanofibrils; uranium ions; adsorption

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [22075307, 21474125]
  2. China Scholarship Council [201706330109]
  3. Shandong Provincial Natural Science Foundation [ZR2021YQ40, ZR2020ZD33, ZR2020KE025]
  4. QIBEBT & Shandong Energy Institute [SEI I202143, SEI I202131]

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Continuous filtering adsorption using nanowood membranes shows great potential in uranium resource exploration and wastewater treatment, providing a sustainable and efficient route for extracting aqueous uranium.
Continuous filtering adsorption has drawn growing interest in the exploration of uranium resources in seawater and reduction in the environmental risks of uraniferous wastewater from nuclear industries. For most filtering adsorbents, repeated filtration, high membrane thickness, and high pressure are normally essential to achieve both a high rejection ratio and high filtration flux. Herein cellulose fibrils were preferentially exfoliated from the lignin-poor layer of secondary cell walls of balsa wood during an in situ amidoximation process. By maintaining honeycomb-like cellular microstructures and cellulose aerogel stuffing in their cell tracheids, the resultant nanowoods showed superior mechanical properties (e.g., compressive strength similar to 1.3 MPa in transverse direction) with large surface areas (similar to 80 m(2) g(-1)). When their cell tracheids were aligned perpendicular to the flow and the edges sealed with a thermoset polymer, they could serve as efficient and high-pressure filtration membranes to capture aquatic uranium ions. In analogy to a typical cascading filtration system, the filtrate passed successively the layered-organized cell tracheids through abundant micropores on their cell walls, enabling a high rejection ratio of >99% and flux of similar to 920 L m(-2) h(-1) under pressure up to 6 bar (membrane thickness of 2 mm). Thus, this study not only provides an in situ approach to producing robust woods with functional nanocellulose encapsulated into their cell tracheids but also offers a sustainable route for high-efficiency extraction of aqueous uranium.

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