| Literature DB >> 29423920 |
Ye Yuan1, Yajie Yang1, Xujiao Ma1, Qinghao Meng1, Lili Wang1, Shuai Zhao1, Guangshan Zhu1.
Abstract
Selective extraction of uranium from water has attracted worldwide attention because the largest source of uranium is seawater with various interference ions (Na+ , K+ , Mg2+ , Ca2+ , etc.). However, traditional adsorbents encapsulate most of their functional sites in their dense structure, leading to problems with low selectivity and adsorption capacities. In this work, the tailor-made binding sites are first decorated into porous skeletons, and a series of molecularly imprinted porous aromatic frameworks are prepared for uranium extraction. Because the porous architecture provides numerous accessible sites, the resultant material has a fourfold increased ion capacity compared with traditional molecularly imprinted polymers and presents the highest selectivity among all reported uranium adsorbents. Moreover, the porous framework can be dispersed into commercial polymers to form composite components for the practical extraction of uranium ions from simulated seawater.Entities:
Keywords: extraction; molecular imprinting technology; porous aromatic frameworks; selectivity; uranium ions
Year: 2018 PMID: 29423920 DOI: 10.1002/adma.201706507
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849