Tong Juan, Liu Yuankun, Han Lipeng, Li Binliang, Chang Beijia, Gao Xiaoqing, Liu Tonghuan, Yang Junqiang, Shi Keliang, Hou Xiaolin
Frontier Science Center for Rare Isotopes, School of Nuclear Science and Technology, Lanzhou University, Lanzhou 730000, China.
School of Nuclear Science and Technology, Lanzhou University, Lanzhou 730000, China.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2025 Apr 9;17(14):21323-21334. doi: 10.1021/acsami.5c02697. Epub 2025 Mar 29.
Due to the complex type of coexisting ions, remarkable acidity, and high radioactivity, efficient and sustainable methods for the removal of pertechnetate (TcO) from acidic nuclear waste streams have attracted much attention. Herein, a porous highly polymeric zwitterionic resin (PDVBVIM1.5SO) was synthesized by installing sulfobetaine zwitterionic units in the polymeric imidazole resin to achieve the purpose of balancing the hydrophilicity and hydrophobicity of the resin structure and improving the reaction kinetics and ion selectivity of the resin at the same time for perrhenate (ReO)/TcO removal from acidic solutions. The results demonstrate that PDVBVIM1.5SO exhibits fast adsorption kinetics, superior adsorption capacity, and excellent selectivity in the presence of a variety of 1000-fold competing anions. The rapid elimination of ReO can be achieved even in 1 mol L HNO. Importantly, when subject to acid soaking, calcination procedure, and high doses of ionizing radiation, PDVBVIM1.5SO maintained its structural integrity and outstanding performance. Additionally, PDVBVIM1.5SO displayed outstanding adsorption efficiency toward a simulated Hanford low-activity waste stream with ReO. This work demonstrates that achieving a balance between hydrophobicity and hydrophilicity in an exchange resin is of great significance for enhancing the selection and removal of TcO/ReO, and PDVBVIM1.5SO resin could be an excellent acid nuclear waste-adsorbing material candidate.