Abstract

A radiochemical purification procedure was developed for the separation of enriched cadmium (111Cd and 112Cd) from natural copper that used as backing; and was based upon the chromatographic adsorption. The separation of copper from cadmium was studied in this work. The ions were selectively separated from aqueous solution. Ion-exchange chromatography was employed as a column (1.5 cm i.d. and 15 cm length) with AG1-X8 resin (chloride form, 100–200 mesh) and a flow rate of 1–2 ml/min throughout the separation. 6 M HCl media was used for the adsorption of Cd and Cu on the resin. Then, Cu was eluted by 2 M HCl and Cd by 100 ml 0.5 M HNO3. The amount of Cu and Cd ions in the final solution (0.5 M HNO3) were measured by pulse polarographic method and the concentration of Cu was found to be <0.1 ppm. The Cd was quantitatively recovered and the recovery yield from ion-exchange chromatography was greater than 96 %.

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