Abstract

A new hydrous crystalline silicotitanate, labeled TAM-5 or CST, was developed for removing radioactive Cs+ from aqueous nuclear waste. This material is stable to radiation, highly selective for cesium relative to sodium, potassium, rubidium, and protons, and performs well in acidic, neutral, and basic solutions. Various experiments were conducted to determine the ion exchange properties of TAM-5. Two kinds of ion exchange sites exist in the solid, and cation exchange in one site affects the ion exchange properties of the other site. These two types of sites have different thermal effects: with increasing temperature the pH of one increases and the pH of the other one decreases. The total ion exchange capacity is 4.6 mequiv/g, but the cesium ion exchange capacity was less, which shows that not all of the ion exchange sites are available for cesium exchange. Step changes were observed in the ion exchange isotherms. The solid phase behaved ideally prior to the step changes. The apparent capacities within the ideal solid region were 0.57 mequiv/g for Cs+, 1.18 mequiv/g for Rb+, and 1.2 mequiv/g for K+. Both direct competition by rubidium and protons and indirect competition by protons and potassium were observed. The rational selectivities, which were measured from binary ion exchange data, can be used in different solutions including the multicomponent ion exchange systems, because they are constant for an ideal solid. Binary ion exchange isotherms were also developed using the rational selectivity as the parameter for the isotherms of cesium, rubidinium, and potassium.

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