Synthesis of Pyridine Dicarboxylic Acid Functionalized and Crosslinked to Polyvinyl Alcohol/polyamide for Thorium Capturing From Aqueous Solution

Thorium harms humans and the environment. Mining can release thorium‐containing waste. This study aims to simplify the production of a novel poly‐adsorbent by mixing pyridine dicarboxylic acid, polyvinyl alcohol, and polyamide and first removing thorium from the solution. Various analytical methods...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:ChemistrySelect (Weinheim) 2024-07, Vol.9 (28), p.n/a
Hauptverfasser: Hendy, Mohamed A., Kashar, Tahani I., Allam, Eman M., Gado, Mohamed A., Yahia, Naema S., Cheira, Mohamed F.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:Thorium harms humans and the environment. Mining can release thorium‐containing waste. This study aims to simplify the production of a novel poly‐adsorbent by mixing pyridine dicarboxylic acid, polyvinyl alcohol, and polyamide and first removing thorium from the solution. Various analytical methods were used to characterize the produced dicarboxylic acid/polyvinyl alcohol/polyamide poly‐adsorbent. The practical conditions on adsorption effectiveness evaluated to pH 3.5, 60 mg poly‐adsorbent, 60 min. Th(IV) uptake for poly‐adsorbent is 107.3 mg/g. The linear and nonlinear uptake for the pseudo‐second‐order is closer to the practical uptake (107.71 mg/g). Hence, the kinetic analysis verified the sorption mechanism. Also, the uptake of linear (107.64 mg/g) and nonlinear (108.63 mg/g) types for the Langmuir isotherm is closer to the practical uptake (107.71 mg/g); thus, the sorption isotherm was suitably utilizing Langmuir modeling. Thermodynamic studies proved that the sorption is spontaneous, exothermic, and random due to the negative ΔG°, negative ΔH°, and positive ΔS° during the thorium adsorption process on poly‐adsorbent. In addition, the regeneration ability of poly‐adsorbent was tested utilizing 1.5 M H2SO4. After six cycles, the poly‐adsorbent showed about 83 % regeneration efficacy. The results confirmed that the dicarboxylic acid/polyvinyl alcohol/polyamide poly‐adsorbent might be effective in removing Th(IV) from the watery solution. The purpose of this work is to remove thorium from aqueous solutions by combining polyvinyl alcohol, polyamide, and pyridine dicarboxylic acid to generate a novel poly‐adsorbent. of sorption conditions applies to assess Thorium ions adsorption. Langmuir modeling provides the sorption mechanism verification. Thermodynamic analyses verify thorium adsorption that occurs spontaneously, exothermically, and randomly. The poly‐adsorbent regenerates six cycles.
ISSN:2365-6549
2365-6549
DOI:10.1002/slct.202402329