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Aqueous Solution Blow Spinning of Seawater‐Stable Polyamidoxime Nanofibers from Water‐Soluble Precursor for Uranium Extraction from Seawater
Author(s) -
Xu Xin,
Yue Yaru,
Cai Dong,
Song Jianan,
Han Caina,
Liu Zhongjie,
Wang Dong,
Xiao Juanxiu,
Wu Hui
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
small methods
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.66
H-Index - 46
ISSN - 2366-9608
DOI - 10.1002/smtd.202000558
Subject(s) - seawater , aqueous solution , adsorption , chemical engineering , uranium , nanofiber , extraction (chemistry) , materials science , chemistry , pulp and paper industry , chromatography , metallurgy , organic chemistry , composite material , geology , oceanography , engineering
Polyamidoxime (PAO)‐based fibers are recognized as one of the most promising adsorbents for industrial‐scale extraction of uranium from seawater. The spinning of PAO is usually processed in environmentally unfriendly organic solvents, which cause serious environmental and cost concerns in industrial‐scale manufacturing. In this work, an aqueous solution blow spinning (ASBS) strategy is developed for large‐scale fabrication of seawater‐stable polyamidoxime/alginate nanofibers (PAO/Alg NFs) from water‐soluble PAO precursor solution. The as‐spun PAO/Alg NFs are ready to be used for uranium adsorption after simple immersion in calcium chloride solution for crosslinking. The 3D porous architecture, flexibility, and strength of nanofibers are well maintained as the inevitable shrinkage and degeneration accompanied by traditional “alkaline‐heat activation” post treatment are completely avoided. A high adsorption capacity of 892.77 and 8.42 mg‐U g −1 NFs is achieved in uranium spiked seawater and 8 tons of nonspiked natural seawater, respectively. Taking advantage of the simplicity, low cost, and industrially scalable features, this novel ASBS approach shows great potential for industrial‐scale production of PAO‐based nanofiber adsorbent with high capacity and good mechanical strength for uranium recovery from natural seawater and industrial wastewater.