| Literature DB >> 27657815 |
Hye-Jin Hong1, Hyeon Su Jeong2, Byoung-Gyu Kim1, Jeongsik Hong1, In-Su Park1, Taegong Ryu1, Kang-Sup Chung1, Hyuncheol Kim3, Jungho Ryu4.
Abstract
In this study, a highly stable alginate/Fe3O4 composite was synthesized, and systematically investigated for the practical application of strontium (Sr) removal in complex media, such as seawater and radioactive wastewater. To overcome the drawbacks of the use of alginate microspheres, high contents of alginic acid and Fe3O4 were used to provide a more rigid structure with little swelling and facile separation, respectively. The synthesized composite was optimized for particle sizes of <400 μm and 1% content of Fe3O4. The alginate/Fe3O4 composite showed excellent Sr uptake (≈400.0 mg/g) and exhibited outstanding selectivity for Sr among various cations (Na, Mg, Ca and K). However, in diluted Sr condition (50 mg/L), Ca significantly affected Sr adsorption, resulting in a decrease of Kd value from 3.7 to 2.4 at the 0.01 M Ca. The alginate/Fe3O4 composite could be completely regenerated using 0.1 M HCl and CaCl2. In real seawater spiked with 50 mg/L of Sr, the alginate/Fe3O4 composite showed 12.5 mg/g of Sr uptake, despite the highly concentrated ions in seawater. The adsorption experiment for radio-active 90Sr revealed a removal efficiency of 67% in real seawater, demonstrating the reliability of the alginate/Fe3O4 composite.Entities:
Keywords: Alginate; Iron oxide; Removal; Seawater; Strontium
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27657815 DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2016.09.034
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chemosphere ISSN: 0045-6535 Impact factor: 7.086