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Molten salt synthesis of MXene-derived hierarchical titanate for effective strontium removal. | LitMetric

Molten salt synthesis of MXene-derived hierarchical titanate for effective strontium removal.

J Hazard Mater

Laboratory of Nuclear Energy Chemistry, Institute of High Energy Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China. Electronic address:

Published: May 2024

The removal and recovery of radioactive Sr(II) from wastewater and seawater has been of great concern due to the negative environmental impacts of nuclear energy development and the potential risk of nuclear accidents. Herein, a facile molten salt synthesis strategy was developed to systematically investigated the reaction of different types of MXenes with nitrates. Among the products, K intercalated hierarchical titanate nanostructures (K-HTNs) obtained from the direct chemical transformation of multilayered TiCT exhibited unique layered structures, good physicochemical properties, and outstanding adsorption performance for Sr(II). The maximum adsorption capacity of Sr(II) by K-HTNs reached 204 mg·g at ambient temperature, and the good regeneration and reusability of the titanate was also demonstrated. K-HTNs showed preferential selectivity for Sr(II) in different environmental media containing competing ions, and the removal efficiency of Sr(II) in real seawater was as high as 93.3 %. The removal mechanism was elaborated to be the exchange of Sr with K/H in the interlayers of K-HTNs, and the adsorbed Sr(II) had a strong interaction with Ti-O termination on the titanate surface. Benefiting from the merits of rapid and scalable synthesis and excellent adsorption performance, MXene-derived K-HTNs have broad application prospects for the purification of Sr-contaminated wastewater and seawater.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhazmat.2024.134079DOI Listing

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