Abstract

Large quantities of uranium-containing radioactive wastewater are typically generated during nuclear fuel cycle processes. Despite significant efforts, efficient capture of migratable hexavalent uranium U(VI) is still a huge challenge due to its acidity, radioactivity, coexisting organics, and high impurity cation abundance in wastewater. Herein, we have fabricated all-polymer-based 0D/2D C4N/C6N7 homostructure hybrids with an S-scheme electronic configuration by coordinating the band engineering of semiconductors to enrich uranium species from the complex wastewater environment. The sample can capture over 97% of U(VI) in the actual concentration of nuclear industrial reprocessing wastewater; also, the U(VI) enrichment ratio still exceeds 95% when the irradiation dose (including α, β, and γ) is up to 100 kGy. Density functional theory and X-ray absorption spectroscopy demonstrate that the aggregation of charge carriers on the surface of the sample regulates the electron-rich microenvironment, thus accelerating the reduction conversion of single electron reaction uranium disproportionation. It is expected that this work can provide more insight into other functional materials, thereby promoting uranium removal advancements in nuclear wastewater.

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