SOHIO process legacy waste treatment

Uranium recovery using ion exchange

More Info
expand_more

Abstract

The feasibility of employing ion-exchange resins for the selective removal of uranium from a complex waste effluent has been investigated. The source of the effluent is a treatment process to reduce the volume of a spent uranium containing catalyst prior to its immobilisation and disposal in South Korea. Commercial anion exchange and chelation resins have been screened, along with an in-house synthesized polyamine functionalized resin. The Langmuir isotherm model produced the best fit for UO2 2+ binding to all resins, with Purolite MTS957, a mixed sulfonic/phosphonic acid functionalised resin, showing the highest equilibrium adsorption capacity for UO2 2+, 96.15 mg g−1. The Modified Dose-Response Model was found to adequately represent breakthrough across all flow rates used and for all resins tested under dynamic testing conditions. The maximum uranium loading capacities under dynamic conditions for simulant and real wastes were established as 131.52 mg g−1 and 68.62 mg g−1, respectively. Purolite MTS957 effectively decontaminated the real effluent to uranium levels below the Korean release limit of 1 mg L−1. Over 99.9% uranium was successfully eluted from the resin bed in under 20 BV with a mixed sodium carbonate/sulfate eluent.

Files

1_s2.0_S1226086X1930468X_main.... (pdf)
(pdf | 2.14 Mb)

Download not available