4.7 Article

Bridging hydrogen bonds from guanidine and amidoxime groups on natural bamboo strips as a superantibacterial and knitted adsorbent to efficiently adsorb uranium from simulated seawater

Journal

SEPARATION AND PURIFICATION TECHNOLOGY
Volume 330, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.seppur.2023.125186

Keywords

Bamboo strips; Guanidine; Amidoxime; Hydrogen bonds; Uranium adsorption

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Uranium adsorption from seawater offers a sustainable solution for future nuclear energy material supply. Researchers have developed a superantibacterial and knitted adsorbent with guanidine and amidoxime groups on bamboo strips to enhance uranium adsorption and resist biofouling. The grafting of guanidine groups improves hydrophilicity and anti-biofouling performance, while the amidoxime groups form a stable coordination structure with uranyl tricarbonate.
Uranium adsorption from seawater can provide a sustainable development path for the future raw material supply of nuclear energy. However, in the process of uranium extraction from seawater, biofouling adheres to the surface of the adsorbent, wasting the adsorption sites and seriously affecting the adsorption capability of the adsorbent. Herein, inspired by the superanti-biofouling property of guanidine groups, a superantibacterial and knitted adsorbent with guanidine and amidoxime groups cografted on natural bamboo strips (G-AOBS) is syn-thesized to adsorb uranium from simulated seawater. The intrinsic structure of bamboo is not destroyed by the whole grafting process, and G-AOBS still maintains the porous and cellulose crystalline structure. The grafting of guanidine groups improves the hydrophilicity and significantly enhances the anti-biofouling performance, thereby increasing the adsorption capacity for uranium (qe = 201.4 +/- 13.23 mg g-1 at pH = 4 with C0 = 100 mg L-1 and qe = 1.04 +/- 0.12 mg g-1 in simulated seawater with C0 = 500 mu g L-1). According to the results of DFT, the guanidine and amidoxime groups can not only replace one carbonate in uranyl tricarbonate alone to form a more stable coordination structure but also have a synergistic effect between the two, that is, using three bridging hydrogen bonds to form the most stable chelation mode with uranyl dicarbonate.

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