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International Journal of Environment Science and Technology
Center for Environment and Energy Research and Studies (CEERS)
ISSN: 1735-1472 EISSN: 1735-1472
Vol. 12, No. 1, 2015, pp. 255-262
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Bioline Code: st15023
Full paper language: English
Document type: Research Article
Document available free of charge
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International Journal of Environment Science and Technology, Vol. 12, No. 1, 2015, pp. 255-262
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Extraction of uranium from nuclear industrial effluent using polyacrylhydroxamic acid sorbent
Satpati, S.K.; Pal, S.; Goswami, D.; Tewari, P.K. & Roy, S.B.
Abstract
Solid-phase extraction process using chelating
sorbent is a novel technique due to its high separation efficiency
and simplicity. A designed three-dimensional crosslinked
hydrophilic chelating polymeric sorbent, polyacrylhydroxamic
acid, was developed for enhanced uptake
of uranium from waste solution (pH 6–9) by complexation
between the sorbent’s active functional group and uranium.
The sorbent was synthesized by polymerization of acrylamide
with cross-linking agent, followed by conversion and
functionalization with hydroxylamine hydrochloride. In this
paper, removal and recovery of uranium from effluent of
uranium material processing plant in the presence of competitive
ions such as sodium, calcium and magnesium were
studied using the sorbent. Uranium uptake property of the
developed sorbent was also investigated with respect to
sorbent’s physical characteristics such as bead size distribution
and bead swelling, in batch experiments. Distribution coefficient
of uranium in the sorbent was substantially high
(1,250 mL of effluent/g of sorbent), and immobilization factor
was 0.028. The results showed that more than 90 %recovery of
uranium is viable from nuclear effluent without preconditioning.
Breakthrough profiles of column operation were successfully
described for effective removal of uranium in continuous
mode.The novel sorbent has been used for polishing the nuclear
wastewater and hence to mitigate the environmental issues.
Keywords
Competitive ions; In-house sorbent; Physical characteristics; Uranium recovery
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