Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7968620 | Journal of Nuclear Materials | 2013 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Carboxy-methyl-cellulose (CMC), a common “delivery vehicle” for the subsurface deployment of iron nanoparticles (INP) has been tested in the current work for the removal of aqueous uranium from synthetic water samples. A comparison of the removal of aqueous uranium from solutions using carboxy-methyl-cellulose with and without iron nanoparticles (CMC-INP and CMC, respectively) was tested over a 48Â h reaction period. Analysis of liquid samples using spectrophotometry determined a maximum sorption capacity of uranium, Qmax, of 185.18Â mg/g and 322.58Â mg/g for CMC and CMC-INP respectively, providing strong evidence of an independent aqueous uranium removal ability exhibited by CMC. The results point out that CMC provides an additional capacity for aqueous uranium removal. Further tests are required to determine whether similar behaviour will be observed for other aqueous contaminant species and if the presence of CMC within a INP slurry inhibits or aids the reactivity, reductive capacity and affinity of INP for aqueous contaminant removal.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Energy
Nuclear Energy and Engineering
Authors
Ioana-Carmen Popescu (HoÅtuc), Petru Filip, Doina Humelnicu, Ionel Humelnicu, Thomas Bligh Scott, Richard Andrew Crane,