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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Materials for the Recovery of Uranium from Seawater

TLDR
This review comprehensively surveys materials developed from 2000-2016 for recovery of seawater uranium, in particular including recent developments in inorganic materials; polymer adsorbents and related research pertaining to amidoxime; and nanostructured materials such as metal-organic frameworks, porous-organic polymers, and mesoporous carbons.
Abstract
More than 1000× uranium exists in the oceans than exists in terrestrial ores. With nuclear power generation expected to increase over the coming decades, access to this unconventional reserve is a matter of energy security. With origins in the mid-1950s, materials have been developed for the selective recovery of seawater uranium for more than six decades, with a renewed interest in particular since 2010. This review comprehensively surveys materials developed from 2000–2016 for recovery of seawater uranium, in particular including recent developments in inorganic materials; polymer adsorbents and related research pertaining to amidoxime; and nanostructured materials such as metal–organic frameworks, porous-organic polymers, and mesoporous carbons. Challenges of performing reliable and reproducible uranium adsorption studies are also discussed, as well as the standardization of parameters necessary to ensure valid comparisons between different adsorbents.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Covalent Organic Frameworks as a Decorating Platform for Utilization and Affinity Enhancement of Chelating Sites for Radionuclide Sequestration.

TL;DR: It is shown that 2D covalent organic frameworks (COFs) with unique structures possess all the traits to be well suited as a platform for the deployment of highly efficient sorbents such that they exhibit remarkable performance, as demonstrated by uranium capture.
Journal ArticleDOI

Opportunities of Covalent Organic Frameworks for Advanced Applications

TL;DR: Recent advancements of COFs as a designer platform for a plethora of applications are emphasized together with discussions about the strategies and principles involved.
Journal ArticleDOI

Emerging natural and tailored materials for uranium-contaminated water treatment and environmental remediation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide a systematic and comprehensive overview of the researches conducted from 2005 to 2018 for removing uranium from aqueous solution by these emerging materials, including inorganic materials (e.g., clay minerals, metal oxides, mesoporous silica), organic polymers, carbon family materials, and porous framework materials.
Journal ArticleDOI

Regenerable and stable sp 2 carbon-conjugated covalent organic frameworks for selective detection and extraction of uranium

TL;DR: A stable covalent organic framework capable of adsorbing and detecting uranyl ions is developed by integrating triazine-based building blocks with amidoxime-substituted linkers, demonstrating great potential of fluorescent COFs for radionuclide detection and extraction.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bio-inspired nano-traps for uranium extraction from seawater and recovery from nuclear waste

TL;DR: Inspired by the high sensitivity of proteins towards specific metal ions, Ma and colleagues demonstrate that introducing secondary coordination spheres into amidoxime-functionalized porous polymers can enhance their uranyl chelating abilities.
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