Reduction of uranium (VI) in water with additive manufactured electrode

IF 4.1 3区 化学 Q1 CHEMISTRY, ANALYTICAL
Florent Belnou , Michel L. Schlegel , Thomas Proslier , Julie Mayounove , Hicham Maskrot
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Abstract

Nuclear energy has a promising future, but conventional uranium resources are expected to be depleted within a century. Electrochemical extraction could overcome this roadblock by quantitatively recovering uranium dissolved in natural waters using high surface-area electrodes. In this paper, 3D-architected electrodes were manufactured and studied in an electrochemical cell for element extraction. First, untreated flat electrodes made by Laser Powder Bed Fusion (LPBF) and studied by Cyclic Voltammetry (CV) with a custom electrochemical flow cell in a solution of 1 mM Fe(III)(CN)63−, 0.1 M KCl have exhibited a shift in redox waves because of an oxidized surface. After electro-etching of the electrode surface with oxalic acid, CV exhibited wave positions closer to literature values with higher amplitudes. However, with a solution of 10−3 M uranium, 0.1 M NaCl with a pH of 2.3, no electrochemical signals were detected. In contrast, uranium electrochemically reacted with, and was quantitatively retained by an electrode coated with 10 nm of TiO2 by Atomic Layer Deposition (ALD), and the electrode surface was able to retain uranium by chronoamperometry (CA) (about 0.5 mg for a surface of 3.0 cm2). To increase the reacting surface, 3D-architected electrodes were manufactured, electro-etched and TiO2-coated. These electrodes showed a tenfold increase in uranium retention (up to 5.7 mg for a surface of 111.1 cm2) that could be partially re-dissolved in a new solution with a yield of 70 %. This work shows the interest of both surface functionalization and architected electrodes for elemental retention.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.80
自引率
6.70%
发文量
912
审稿时长
2.4 months
期刊介绍: The Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry is the foremost international journal devoted to the interdisciplinary subject of electrochemistry in all its aspects, theoretical as well as applied. Electrochemistry is a wide ranging area that is in a state of continuous evolution. Rather than compiling a long list of topics covered by the Journal, the editors would like to draw particular attention to the key issues of novelty, topicality and quality. Papers should present new and interesting electrochemical science in a way that is accessible to the reader. The presentation and discussion should be at a level that is consistent with the international status of the Journal. Reports describing the application of well-established techniques to problems that are essentially technical will not be accepted. Similarly, papers that report observations but fail to provide adequate interpretation will be rejected by the Editors. Papers dealing with technical electrochemistry should be submitted to other specialist journals unless the authors can show that their work provides substantially new insights into electrochemical processes.
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