4.7 Article

Removal of trace radioactive Cs+ by zirconium titanium phosphate: From bench-scale to pilot-scale

Journal

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jece.2022.108073

Keywords

Zirconium titanium phosphate; Cs+; Trace concentration; Pilot-scale; Ion exchange

Funding

  1. Natural Science Foundation of Jiangxi Province [20212BAB203001]
  2. Research Foundation for Advanced Talents of East China University of Technology [DHBK2019126]
  3. Open fund of Jiangxi Key Laboratory for Mass Spectrometry and Instrumentation [JXMS202016]
  4. Defense Industrial Technology Development Program [JCKY2019401C004]
  5. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21866004]

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In this study, Zirconium Titanium Phosphate (ZTP) was prepared and tested for its ability to remove Cs from seawater. The results showed that ZTP had good adsorption performance for Cs+, with a removal rate of 98.8% at trace concentration. Radioactive experiments demonstrated a selective removal rate of 98.3% for 137Cs+. The slurry-bed adsorption device also showed promising results, with a removal rate of 92.7% after 12 cycles.
Removing trace radioactive 137Cs from aquatic system is still a challenge. Herein, Zirconium Titanium Phosphate (ZTP) was prepared and utilized for Cs removal from seawater. The structure and morphology of ZTP were systematically characterized. ZTP exhibited typical feature of tetravalent metal acid, and the surface was pocked with abundant hydroxyl groups which can reacted with H2O to form exchangeable protons. Bench-scale to pilotscale adsorption was carried out to assess Cs removal capacity and rate. ZTP showed a good adsorption performance for Cs+ especially at trace concentration (500 ppb) and the removal rate in deionized water and seawater were 98.8 % and 83.9 %, respectively. Radioactive experiments were conducted to test the selective removal of 137Cs+ and the removal rates reached 98.3 %. Slurry-bed adsorption device was designed and used as the pilot-scale equipment. The removal rate was as high as 92.7 % after 12 cycles, indicated that ZTP is one of the promising adsorbents in industrial application. Pyridine adsorption IR spectra indicated that surface of ZTP was riddled with Bronsted and Lewis acid sites, and the protons at the Bronsted acid site exchanged with Cs+. This work will provide reference for the treatment of large-scale Cs-contaminated wastewater.

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