4.7 Article

Surface ion-imprinted brewer's spent grain with low template loading for selective uranyl ions adsorption from simulated wastewater

Journal

JOURNAL OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS
Volume 440, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2022.129682

Keywords

Uranium; Adsorption; Brewer's spent grain; Ion-imprinted polymer; Selectivity

Funding

  1. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research [02NUK046A]
  2. China Scholarship Council (CSC) [201804910464]

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In this study, a highly selective ion-imprinted brewer's spent grain (IIP-BSG) adsorbent was prepared using a high monomer/template molar ratio for efficient removal of uranyl ions from wastewater. The IIP-BSG exhibited high adsorption capacity, selectivity, and reusability, and showed potential for selective separation and concentration of U(VI) from nuclear wastewater and mine water.
Efficient removal of uranyl ions from wastewater requires excellent selectivity of the adsorbents. Herein, we report a new strategy using a high monomer/template molar ratio of 500:1 to prepare surface ion-imprinted brewer's spent grain (IIP-BSG) for selective U(VI) removal using binary functional monomers (2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate and diethyl vinylphosphonate) with high site accessibility and easy template removal. IIP-BSG exhibits a maximum U(VI) adsorption capacity of 165.7 mg/g, a high selectivity toward U(VI) in the presence of an excess amount of Eu(III) (Eu/U molar ratio = 20), a good tolerance of salinity, and a high reusability. In addition, mechanism studies have revealed electrostatic interaction and a coordination of uranyl ions by carboxyl and phosphoryl groups, the predominant contribution of high-energy (specific) sites during selective adsorption, and internal mass transfer as the rate-controlling step of U(VI) adsorption. Furthermore, IIP-BSG shows great potentials to separate U(VI) from lanthanides in simulated nuclear wastewater (pH(0) = 3.5) and selectively concentrate U(VI) from simulated mine water (pH(0) = 7.1). This study proves that the ion-imprinting effect can be achieved using a very low template amount with reduced production cost and secondary pollution, which benefits large-scale promotion of the ion-imprinted materials for selective uranyl ions removal.

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