4.5 Article

Removal of uranium(VI) from aqueous solution by apricot shell activated carbon

Journal

JOURNAL OF RADIOANALYTICAL AND NUCLEAR CHEMISTRY
Volume 295, Issue 3, Pages 2029-2034

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10967-012-2277-x

Keywords

Uranium; Adsorption; Apricot shell activated carbon (ASAC); Isotherm; Kinetics

Funding

  1. National Outstanding Youth Research Foundation of China [40925010]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [40920134003, 41273131]
  3. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2012M510322]

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Uranium is a toxic and radioactive heavy metal found in nuclear effluents and should be treated based on environmental considerations. The adsorption of uranyl cations (UO2 (2+)) by apricot shell activated carbon (ASAC) was investigated in a batch system. The effects of pH, contact time, temperature, adsorbent dosage on the adsorption kinetics and equilibrium adsorption isotherms of U(VI) were examined. The U(VI) uptake was fast within the first 60 min and reached an equilibrium state at 120 min. The adsorption process was highly pH dependent and the maximum adsorption was obtained at an initial solution pH of 6.0. Temperature over the range 25-45 A degrees C had little effect on the U(VI) adsorption. The U(VI) removal efficiency increased concurrently with increasing ASAC dosage, whereas the U(VI) adsorption capacity decreased with increasing ASAC dosage. The adsorption process followed both Langmuir and Freundlich isotherms. On the basis of Langmuir model, the maximum adsorption capacity was found to be 59.17 mg U(VI)/g adsorbent. The adsorption kinetics can be very well defined by the pseudo-first-order rate model. The present results suggest that ASAC could be used as an adsorbent for an efficient removal of U(VI) from aqueous solution.

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