Abstract

Owing to the abundant uranium reserves in the oceans, the collection of uranium from seawater has aroused the widespread interest. Compared to the uranium extraction from ore, uranium collection from seawater is a more environmentally friendly strategy. The amidoxime (AO) functional group has been considered as one of the most efficient chelating groups for uranium capture. In this work, by drawing upon the photothermal character and antibacterial activity of cuttlefish ink, a cuttlefish ink loaded polyamidoxime (CI-PAO) membrane adsorbent is developed. Under one-sun illumination, the CI-PAO membrane shows a high extraction capacity of 488.76 mg-U/g-Ads in 500 mL 8 ppm uranium spiked simulated seawater, which is 1.24 times higher than PAO membrane. The adsorption rate of CI-PAO membrane is increased by 32.04%. Furthermore, exhibiting roughly 75% bacteriostatic rate in composite marine bacteria, the CI-PAO shows a dramatically antibacterial activity, which effectively prevents the functional sites on the adsorbent surface from being occupied by the biofouling blocks. After immersing in natural seawater for 4 weeks, light-irradiated CI-PAO gave high uranium uptake capacity of 6.17 mg-U/g-Ads. Hence, the CI-PAO membrane adsorbent can be considered as a potential candidate for the practical application for uranium extraction from seawater.

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