Pistachio shells as remediating agents for uranium in contaminated industrial seawater

2020 
Abstract Waterways have histories of being contaminated by heavy and/or radioactive metals produced by industrial processes. Natural radioisotopes of uranium (238U, 235U and 234U), long-lived radiometals, are widespread in the environment as a result of both naturally occurring processes and anthropogenic processes. Uranium is considered a major threat to humans. Previous research has focused on using inorganic materials (e.g. ion-exchangers, extractants, nanoporous sorbents) to remove such metal. However, there has been a rise in using biodegradable, recyclable, and organic biological wastes to remove heavy toxic metals from aqueous solutions. The purpose of this study is to identify pistachio shells as good candidates for the removal of uranyl from aqueous solutions. The influences of pH, contact time, temperature, and initial uranyl concentration on uranyl uptake were investigated. The influence of pH was observed to be variable, with relatively high uptake occurring at pH 4 and at slightly alkaline pH values. Uptake increased as a function of contact time, temperature, and initial uranyl concentration. The mechanism followed pseudo-second-order and intraparticle kinetics models, and the shell was demonstrated to be a Freundlich isotherm. The shells were successfully demonstrated to be viable adsorbents for uranium in seawater samples, with obtained trends similar to those achieved in the batch studies.
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