Mechanism unravelling for ultrafast and selective 99TcO4– uptake by a radiation-resistant cationic covalent organic framework: a combined radiological experiment and molecular dynamics simulation study† †Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c9sc00172g

Separation of TcO 4 – by a cationic covalent organic framework is achieved for the first time, showing advantages of extremely fast sorption kinetics, ultrahigh uptake capacity, good anion-exchange selectivity, and excellent radiation resistance. 99 Tc is one of the most problematic fission products...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chemical science (Cambridge) 2019-02, Vol.10 (15), p.4293-4305
Hauptverfasser: He, Linwei, Liu, Shengtang, Chen, Long, Dai, Xing, Li, Jie, Zhang, Mingxing, Ma, Fuyin, Zhang, Chao, Yang, Zaixing, Zhou, Ruhong, Chai, Zhifang, Wang, Shuao
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Separation of TcO 4 – by a cationic covalent organic framework is achieved for the first time, showing advantages of extremely fast sorption kinetics, ultrahigh uptake capacity, good anion-exchange selectivity, and excellent radiation resistance. 99 Tc is one of the most problematic fission products in the nuclear fuel cycle owing to its large inventory in used nuclear fuel, long half-life, potential radiation hazard, high environmental mobility of its major species 99 TcO 4 – , and its redox-active nature. Ideally, 99 TcO 4 – should be removed at the first stage, when the used fuel rods are dissolved in highly concentrated nitric acid solution, which can substantially reduce its interference with the solvent extraction process through catalytic redox reactions with the key actinides and diminish the chance of discharge into the environment as the volatile species during the waste vitrification process. However, this task cannot be achieved by any of the reported anion-scavenging materials including traditional polymeric anion-exchange resins, inorganic cationic framework materials, and recently developed cationic metal–organic framework materials, because they either are not stable under the extreme conditions of the combined high acidity and strong radiation field or do not possess the required uptake selectivity towards 99 TcO 4 – in the presence of a huge excess of competing anions such as NO 3 – and SO 4 2– . Herein, we present the first study of 99 TcO 4 – removal under extreme conditions by a two-dimensional conjugated cationic covalent organic framework material, SCU-COF-1. This material exhibits ultrahigh acid stability, great resistance towards both large-dose β and γ irradiation and unprecedented 99 TcO 4 – uptake capabilities including extremely fast sorption kinetics (sorption equilibrium can be reached within 1 min), ultrahigh uptake capacity (702.4 mg g –1 for the surrogate ReO 4 – at a slightly elevated temperature), and good anion-exchange selectivity towards 99 TcO 4 – . These excellent features endow SCU-COF-1 with the practical capabilities of separating 99 TcO 4 – from both simulant highly acidic fuel reprocessing solutions (3 M nitric acid) and low-activity waste streams at the US legacy nuclear site. The anion-exchange mechanism and the 99 TcO 4 – uptake selectivity are further demonstrated and clearly visualized by the molecular dynamics simulation investigations.
ISSN:2041-6520
2041-6539
DOI:10.1039/c9sc00172g