Abstract
Nuclear energy is among the most viable alternatives to our current fossil fuel-based energy economy. The mass deployment of nuclear energy as a low-emissions source requires the reprocessing of used nuclear fuel to recover fissile materials and mitigate radioactive waste. A major concern with reprocessing used nuclear fuel is the release of volatile radionuclides such as xenon and krypton that evolve into reprocessing facility off-gas in parts per million concentrations. The existing technology to remove these radioactive noble gases is a costly cryogenic distillation; alternatively, porous materials such as metal-organic frameworks have demonstrated the ability to selectively adsorb xenon and krypton at ambient conditions. Here we carry out a high-throughput computational screening of large databases of metal-organic frameworks and identify SBMOF-1 as the most selective for xenon. We affirm this prediction and report that SBMOF-1 exhibits by far the highest reported xenon adsorption capacity and a remarkable Xe/Kr selectivity under conditions pertinent to nuclear fuel reprocessing.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Banerjee, D., Simon, C. M., Plonka, A. M., Motkuri, R. K., Liu, J., Chen, X., … Thallapally, P. K. (2016). Metal-organic framework with optimally selective xenon adsorption and separation. Nature Communications, 7. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms11831
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.