An efficient method for the rapid and ion-selective desalination of radioactive iodine in several aqueous solutions is described by using gold nanoparticles-immobilized cellulose acetate membrane filters.
Here, we demonstrate a detail protocol for the preparation of nanomaterials-embedded composite membranes and its application to the efficient and ion-selective removal of radioactive iodines. By using citrate-stabilized gold nanoparticles (mean diameter: 13 nm) and cellulose acetate membranes, gold nanoparticle-embedded cellulose acetate membranes (Au-CAM) have easily been fabricated. The nano-adsorbents on Au-CAM were highly stable in the presence of high concentration of inorganic salts and organic molecules. The iodide ions in aqueous solutions could rapidly be captured by this engineered membrane. Through a filtration process using an Au-CAM containing filter unit, excellent removal efficiency (>99%) as well as ion-selective desalination result was achieved in a short time. Moreover, Au-CAM provided good reusability without significant decrease of its performances. These results suggested that the present technology using the engineered hybrid membrane will be a promising process for the large-scale decontamination of radioactive iodine from liquid wastes.
For several decades, huge amount of radioactive liquid wastes has been generated by medical institutes, research facilities, and nuclear reactors. These pollutants have often been a palpable threat to environment and human health1,2,3. Especially, radioactive iodine is recognized as one of the most hazardous elements from nuclear plant accidents. For example, an environmental report on the Fukushima and Chernobyl nuclear reactor demonstrated that the amount of released radioactive iodines including 131I (t1/2 = 8.02 days) and 129I (t1/2 = 15.7 million years) to the environment was larger than those of other radionuclides4,5. In particular, the exposure of these radioisotopes resulted in high uptake and enrichment in human thyroid6. Moreover, released radioactive iodines can cause severe contamination of soil, seawater and ground water owing to their high solubility in water. Therefore, a lot of remediation processes using various inorganic and organic adsorbents have been investigated to capture radioactive iodines in aqueous wastes7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20. Although extensive efforts have been devoted for the development of advanced adsorbent systems, the establishment of a decontamination method showing satisfactory performances under continuous in-flow condition was very limited. Recently, we reported a novel desalination process showing good removal efficiency, ion-selectivity, sustainability, and reusability by using hybrid nano-composite materials made of gold nanoparticle (AuNPs)21,22,23. Among them, gold nanoparticle-embedded cellulose acetate membranes (Au-CAM) facilitated highly efficient desalination of iodide ions under a continuous-flow system compared with those of existing adsorbent materials. Moreover, the whole procedure could be finished in a short time, which was another advantage for the treatment of nuclear wastes generated from post-use in medical and industrial applications. The overall goal of this manuscript is to provide a step-by-step protocol for the preparation of Au-CAM24. We also demonstrate a rapid and convenient filtration process for ion-selective capture of radioactive iodine using the engineered composite membranes. The detailed protocol in this report will offer a useful application of nanomaterials in the research field of environmental science.
1. Synthesis of Citrate-Stabilized Gold Nanoparticles
2. Preparation of Hybrid Membrane (Au-CAM)
3. Adsorption of Radioactive Iodine Using Au-CAM in a Batch System
4. Desalination of Radioactive Iodine under Continuous In-Flow Condition
We have demonstrated simple methods for the fabrication of Au-CAM using citrate-stabilized AuNPs and cellulose acetate membrane (Figure 1a). The surface of Au-CAM was observed by SEM which showed that the nanomaterials were incorporated stably on the cellulose nanofibers (Figure 2). The nanoparticles incarcerated on the membrane were sustained stably and were not released from the membrane by continual washing with aqueous solutions such as 1.0 M NaCl. The adsorption capacity of an Au-CAM was approximately 12.2 μmol of iodide anion per 1 g of AuNPs24. To evaluate the desalination performance, the Au-CAM prepared by the vacuum-assisted method were immersed into aqueous solutions containing 2.2 MBq of [125I]NaI (Figure 1b). After 30 min incubation, most of the radioactive iodine (>99%) in pure water and 1.0 M NaCl was captured by Au-CAM (Figure 3). On the other hand, the adsorption of radioactivity was inhibited completely in the presence of non-radioactive NaI, because the surface of AuNPs was occupied by access amount of iodide anions (127I–).
For more useful application of the current method, Au-CAM filter was applied to a continuous desalination process. The radioactive iodine solutions (3.7 MBq/50 mL) were passed through a filter unit containing Au-CAM at an in-flow rate of 1.5 mL/s (Figure 1c). The amount of the residual radioactivity in the filtrate was measured using a γ-counter. The removal efficiency (%) was defined by the following equation (1).
Removal efficiency (%) = (C0 - Ce)/C0 x 100 (1)
Where C0 is the concentration of radioactive iodine before filtration step and Ce is the concentration of radioactive iodine after filtration step.
As shown in Figure 4, the concentration of radioactive iodine was decreased significantly, and the excellent efficiency was obtained through a filtration step. In particular, the desalination performance of Au-CAM was not suppressed by high concentration of inorganic salts such as sodium, cesium, and strontium and several organic substances. In all cases, the removal efficiency of Au-CAM was higher than 99.5%. Au-CAM showed high removal efficiency under neutral and basic condition (up to pH 13), however, it dropped to ca. 90% under acidic condition (pH 1). Furthermore, Au-CAM could be reusable for repetitive desalination of radioactive iodine in synthetic urine and seawater. During the consecutive filtration process, more than 99% of radioactivity in aqueous media was captured efficiently using a single Au-CAM filter unit24.
Figure 1. Schematic illustration of the desalination procedure in this protocol using Au-CAM. (a) Fabrication of Au-CAM by using a syringe filter unit. (b) Adsorption of radioactive iodine in a batch system. (c) Filtration of radioactive iodine under continuous in-flow condition. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2.Characterization of Au-CAM. (a) A photographic image of cellulose acetate membrane (diameter 47 mm). (b) A photographic image of Au-CAM (diameter 47 mm). (c) SEM image of cellulose acetate membrane (40,000X). (d) SEM image of Au-CAM (40,000X). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3.Time-dependent removal efficiency of radioactive iodine using Au-CAM in pure water, 1.0 M NaCl, and 10 mM NaI. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 4. Filtration of radioactive iodine anions in several aqueous solutions using Au-CAM. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
In recent year, various engineered nanomaterials and membranes have been developed to remove hazardous radioactive metals and heavy metals in water based on their specific functionality in adsorption techniques25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34,35,36,37. In this study, we demonstrated highly useful method for rapid and efficient separation of radioactive halogen species. By using citrate-stabilized AuNPs and a commercially available cellulose acetate membrane, Au-CAM can easily be prepared and the fabrication step is highly reproducible. As iodide anions is spontaneously chemisorbed on the surface of AuNPs, Au-CAM can be applied to the remediation of radioactive iodines in various aqueous media. Among various radioisotopes of iodine, we selected 125I– as a target element in this study because it emits a low radiation energy compared to other radioactive iodines and the decay half-life (59.5 days) is long enough to develop an optimized process. But the reactivity of 125I– is identical with other iodine isotopes, and thus this method will be utilized to remove more hazardous radioelements such as 131I– and 129I–.
In the presence of high concentration of competing anions such as phosphate, chloride, and hydroxide, the nano-hybrid membrane (Au-CAM) showed excellent desalination efficiency and good reusability. Another significant advantage is that immobilized nanoparticles on a cellulose acetate membrane is stable under high salt conditions and varied pH. It appears like that AuNPs on the membrane of carbohydrate were stabilized by oxygen atom containing functional groups including hydroxyl and carbonyl groups38,39. Thus, the hybrid membrane can be stored for several weeks without the loss of its performance and chemical stability. As shown in Figure 4, Au-CAM showed excellent removal efficiency in various aqueous media. The limitation of the present method is that Au-CAM would not be useful in organic solvent system including alcohols and dimethyl sulfoxide, because cellulose acetate is partially dissolved in these media and thus AuNPs can be released from the membrane.
There have been several reports describing the desalination of radioisotopes in contaminated water using various adsorbents including engineered membranes40,41,42. The continuous process in the present study is superior to conventionally used methods in terms of removal efficiency, ion-selectivity and reusability. Using a single Au-CAM (diameter: 25 mm), ca. 90 mL of aqueous waste can be purified in 1 min. It is anticipated that a lot of Au-CAM filters will be easily produced in a short time, because large-scale synthesis and characterization of the citrate-stabilized AuNPs were well-established. Taken together, Au-CAM will be a promising adsorbent system worth to investigate for the practical remediation of industrial and medical radioactive iodine wastes.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
This work was supported by the research grant from the National Research Foundation of Korea (Grant number: 2017M2A2A6A01070858).
Hydrochloric acid | DUKSAN | 1129 | |
Nitric acid | JUNSEI | 37335-1250 | |
Chloroautic chloride trihydrate (HAuCl4·3H2O) | Sigma Aldrich | 254169 | |
Sodium citrate tribasic dihydrate | Sigma Aldrich | 71402 | |
[125I]NaI | Perkin-Elmer | NEZ033A010MC | |
Sodium chloride | Sigma Aldrich | S9888 | |
Sodium iodide | Sigma Aldrich | 383112 | |
Sodium hydroxide | Sigma Aldrich | S5881 | |
Lithium L-lactate | Sigma Aldrich | L2250 | Synthetic urine |
Citric acid | Sigma Aldrich | C1909 | Synthetic urine |
Sodium hydrogen carbonate | JUNSEI | 43305-1250 | Synthetic urine |
Urea | Sigma Aldrich | U1250 | Synthetic urine |
Calcium chloride | JUNSEI | 18230-0301 | Synthetic urine |
Magnesium sulfate | SAMCHUN | M0146 | Synthetic urine |
Potassium dihydrogen phosphate | JUNSEI | 84185A1250 | Synthetic urine |
Dipotassium hydrogen phosphate | JUNSEI | 84120-1250 | Synthetic urine |
Sodium sulfate | JUNSEI | 83260-1250 | Synthetic urine |
Ammonium chloride | Sigma Aldrich | A9434 | Synthetic urine |
Sea water | Sigma Aldrich | S9148 | |
1x PBS | Thermo | SH30256.01 | |
Cellulose acetate membranes (pore size: 0.20 μm, diameter: 25 mm) | Advantec MFS | 25CS045AS | |
Cellulose acetate membranes (pore size: 0.20 μm, diameter: 47 mm) | Advantec MFS | C045A047A | |
47 mm Glass Microanalysis Holders | Advantec MFS | KG47(311400) | |
Petri dish (50 mm diameter ´ 15 mm height) | SPL | 10050 | |
Gamma counter | Perkin-Elmer | 2480 WIZARD2 | Model number |
UV-vis spectrophotometer | Thermo | GENESYS 10 | Model number |
Transmission electron microscopy | Hitachi | H-7650 | Model number |
Field Emission Scanning electron microscope | FEI | Verios 460L | Model number |