4.7 Article

Radioactivity/Radionuclide (U-232 and Am-241) Removal from Waters by Polyurea-Crosslinked Alginate Aerogels in the Sub-Picomolar Concentration Range

Journal

GELS
Volume 9, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/gels9030211

Keywords

alginate aerogels; polymer-crosslinked aerogels; polyurea-crosslinked alginate aerogels; radioactive decontamination; Am-241 tracers; U-232 tracers; environmental water decontamination

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The removal of radionuclide/radioactivity from laboratory and environmental water samples under ambient conditions was investigated using polyurea-crosslinked calcium alginate aerogels. The removal efficiency strongly depends on the pH of the solution, with higher efficiency in acidic solutions. This study is significant for the treatment of radioactive contaminated waters using aerogel materials.
The removal of radionuclide/radioactivity from laboratory and environmental water samples under ambient conditions was investigated via batch-type experiments using polyurea-crosslinked calcium alginate (X-alginate) aerogels. Water samples were contaminated with traces of U-232 and Am-241. The removal efficiency of the material depends strongly on the solution pH; it is above 80% for both radionuclides in acidic solutions (pH 4), while it decreases at about 40% for Am-241 and 25% for U-232 in alkaline solutions (pH 9). This is directly associated with the presence of the radionuclide species in each case; the cationic species UO22+ and Am3+ prevail at pH 4, and the anionic species UO2(CO3)(3)(4-) and Am(CO3)(2)(-) prevail at pH 9. Adsorption on X-alginate aerogels is realized by coordination of cationic species on carboxylate groups (replacing Ca2+) or other functional groups, i.e., -NH and/or -OH. In environmental water samples, i.e., ground water, wastewater and seawater, which are alkaline (pH around 8), the removal efficiency for Am-241 is significantly higher (45-60%) compared to that for U-232 (25-30%). The distribution coefficients (K-d) obtained for the sorption of Am-241 and U-232 by X-alginate aerogels are around 10(5) L/kg, even in environmental water samples, indicating a strong sorption affinity of the aerogel material for the radionuclides. The latter, along with their stability in aqueous environments, make X-alginate aerogels attractive candidates for the treatment of radioactive contaminated waters. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study on the removal of americium from waters using aerogels and the first investigation of adsorption efficiency of an aerogel material at the sub-picomolar concentration range.

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