Yatsandra Oyola
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
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Featured researches published by Yatsandra Oyola.
Separation Science and Technology | 2013
Jungseung Kim; Costas Tsouris; Richard T. Mayes; Yatsandra Oyola; Tomonori Saito; Christopher J. Janke; Sheng Dai; Erich Schneider; Darshan Sachde
The recovery of uranium (U) from seawater has been investigated for over six decades in efforts to secure uranium sources for future energy production. The majority of the research activities have focused on inorganic materials, chelating polymers, and nanomaterials. Previous studies of uranium adsorption from aqueous solutions, mainly seawater, are reviewed here with a focus on various adsorbent materials, adsorption parameters, adsorption characterization, and marine studies. Continuous progress has been made over several decades, with adsorbent loadings approaching 3.2 mg U/g adsorbent in equilibrium with seawater. Further research is needed to improve first, the viability including improved capacity, selectivity, and kinetics, and second, the sorbent regeneration for multicycle use. An overview of the status of the uranium adsorption technology is provided and future research needs to make this technology commercially competitive are discussed.
Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2014
Tomonori Saito; Suree Brown; Sabornie Chatterjee; Jungseung Kim; Costas Tsouris; Richard T. Mayes; Li-Jung Kuo; Gary A. Gill; Yatsandra Oyola; Christopher J. Janke; Sheng Dai
A novel adsorbent preparation method using atom-transfer radical polymerization (ATRP) combined with radiation-induced graft polymerization (RIGP) was developed to synthesize an adsorbent for uranium recovery from seawater. The ATRP method allowed a much higher degree of grafting on the adsorbent fibers (595–2818%) than that allowed by RIGP alone. The adsorbents were prepared with varied compositions of amidoxime groups and hydrophilic acrylate groups. The successful preparation revealed that both ligand density and hydrophilicity were critical for optimal performance of the adsorbents. Adsorbents synthesized in this study showed a relatively high performance (141–179 mg g−1 at 49–62% adsorption) in laboratory screening tests using a uranium concentration of ∼6 ppm. This performance is much higher than that of known commercial adsorbents. However, actual seawater experiment showed impeded performance compared to the recently reported high-surface-area-fiber adsorbents, due to slow adsorption kinetics. The impeded performance motivated the investigation of the effect of hydrophilic block addition on the graft chain terminus. The addition of a hydrophilic block on the graft chain terminus nearly doubled the uranium adsorption capacity in seawater, from 1.56 mg g−1 to 3.02 mg g−1. The investigation revealed the importance of polymer chain conformation, in addition to the ligand and hydrophilic group ratio, for advanced adsorbent synthesis for uranium recovery from seawater.
Dalton Transactions | 2014
Horng-Bin Pan; Weisheng Liao; Chien M. Wai; Yatsandra Oyola; Christopher J. Janke; Guoxin Tian; Linfeng Rao
Uranium adsorbed on amidoxime-based polyethylene fiber in simulated seawater can be quantitatively eluted at room temperature using 1 M Na2CO3 containing 0.1 M H2O2. This efficient elution process is probably due to the formation of an extremely stable uranyl-peroxo-carbonato complex in the carbonate solution. After washing with water, the sorbent can be reused with minimal loss of uranium loading capacity. Possible existence of this stable uranyl species in ocean water is also discussed.
Science China-chemistry | 2013
Yanfeng Yue; Xiao-Guang Sun; Richard T. Mayes; Jungseung Kim; Pasquale F. Fulvio; Zhen-An Qiao; Suree Brown; Costas Tsouris; Yatsandra Oyola; Sheng Dai
Polymer-coated mesoporous carbon nanocomposites were prepared from the immobilization of acrylonitrile and acrylic acid copolymers with divinylbenzene as a crosslinker onto a mesoporous carbon framework. High surface areas were maintained after polymerization with accessible porosity. This functional nanocomposite was tested as an adsorbent for uranium from high salinity solutions. Uranium adsorption results have shown that the adsorption capacities are strongly influenced by the density of the amidoxime groups and the specific surface area.
RSC Advances | 2013
Patrick C. Hillesheim; Joseph A. Singh; Shannon M. Mahurin; Pasquale F. Fulvio; Yatsandra Oyola; Xiang Zhu; De-en Jiang; Sheng Dai
A series of 1,2,4-triazolium-based ionic liquids have been synthesized and evaluated for their use in supported ionic liquid membrane based CO2 separations. The properties of these triazolium-based compounds have proven sensitive to isomeric substitutions, such as isopropyl and propyl groups, as well as ortho and para substitutions in the aryl derivative compounds. While physical properties such as viscosity did not vary significantly between structural isomers, the CO2 permeability, selectivity, and solubility exhibited significant changes allowing for development of task-specific triazolium-based ionic liquids for separation applications. COSMOtherm studies were also completed to gain a better understanding of the ionic liquids which demonstrated a strong correlation between experimental and computational values for the alkyl bearing ionic liquids. Hence, 1,2,4-triazolium-based liquids comprise a class of compounds offering unique opportunities to examine how structural changes affect the physicochemical properties which are necessary for the continuous development of ionic liquids with enhanced adsorption capacity and selectivity in separations.
Chemical Communications | 2013
Pasquale F. Fulvio; Patrick C. Hillesheim; Yatsandra Oyola; Shannon M. Mahurin; Gabriel M. Veith; Sheng Dai
Hierarchical nanoporous nitrogen-doped carbons were prepared from task specific ionic liquids having a bis-imidazolium motif linked with various organic groups. While ethyl chains linking the imidazolium ions afforded microporous-mesoporous carbons, long or aromatic groups resulted in microporous samples.
RSC Advances | 2013
Chengcheng Tian; Yatsandra Oyola; Kimberly M. Nelson; Song-Hai Chai; Xiang Zhu; J. Chris Bauer; Christopher J. Janke; Suree Brown; Yanglong Guo; Sheng Dai
Irradiation-induced co-grafting of acrylonitrile and vinylsulfonic acid (or vinylphosphonic acid) monomers on polyethylene fiber was studied for the heterogeneous catalysis of fructose dehydration into 5-hydroxymethylfurfural (HMF) solely in water. The acidic co-polymer exhibited excellent catalytic activity and maintained a high yield after being regenerated. We attribute these catalytic properties to a branched environment created by grafted chains, hydrophilic enough to interact with fructose in water but collectively dense enough to form a unique local phase mimicking organic solvents.
Catalysis Letters | 2013
J. Chris Bauer; David R. Mullins; Yatsandra Oyola; Steven H. Overbury; Sheng Dai
Supported AuCu and AuCuPd catalysts were synthesized through the diffusion of Pd and Cu into Au nanoparticle seeds. When supported on SiO2, the AuCuPd nanoparticles were found to be the most active for the oxidation of CO after being exposed to reductive pretreatment conditions as opposed to oxidative pretreatment conditions. In contrast, AuCu/SiO2 was found to be more active for CO oxidation after the alloy phase was segregated into a Au–CuOx heterostructure. In situ XRD and EXAFS were used to monitor the structural changes of AuCu and AuCuPd catalysts as they were subjected to different pretreatment conditions. Graphical Abstract
Archive | 2014
Christopher J. Janke; Sadananda Das; Yatsandra Oyola; Richard T. Mayes; Tomonori Saito; Suree Brown; Gary A. Gill; Li-Jung Kuo; Jordana R. Wood
This report describes work on the successful completion of Milestone M2FT-14OR03100115 (8/20/2014) entitled, “Complete new adsorbent materials for marine testing to demonstrate 4.5 g-U/kg adsorbent”. This effort is part of the Seawater Uranium Recovery Program, sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Nuclear Energy, and involved the development of new adsorbent materials at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) and marine testing at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL). ORNL has recently developed two new families of fiber adsorbents that have demonstrated uranium adsorption capacities greater than 4.5 g-U/kg adsorbent after marine testing at PNNL. One adsorbent was synthesized by radiation-induced graft polymerization of itaconic acid and acrylonitrile onto high surface area polyethylene fibers followed by amidoximation and base conditioning. This fiber showed a capacity of 4.6 g-U/kg adsorbent in marine testing at PNNL. The second adsorbent was prepared by atom-transfer radical polymerization of t-butyl acrylate and acrylonitrile onto halide-functionalized round fibers followed by amidoximation and base hydrolysis. This fiber demonstrated uranium adsorption capacity of 5.4 g-U/kg adsorbent in marine testing at PNNL.
Archive | 2015
Christopher J. Janke; Sadananda Das; Yatsandra Oyola; Richard T. Mayes; Gary A. Gill; Li-Jung Kuo; Jordana R. Wood
This report describes work on the successful completion of Milestone M2FT-15OR0310041 (1/30/2015) entitled, Demonstrate braided material with 3.5 g U/kg sorption capacity under seawater testing condition . This effort is part of the Seawater Uranium Recovery Program, sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Nuclear Energy, and involved the development of new adsorbent braided materials at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) and marine testing at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL). ORNL has recently developed four braided fiber adsorbents that have demonstrated uranium adsorption capacities greater than 3.5 g U/kg adsorbent after marine testing at PNNL. The braided adsorbents were synthesized by braiding or leno weaving high surface area polyethylene fibers and conducting radiation-induced graft polymerization of itaconic acid and acrylonitrile monomers onto the braided materials followed by amidoximation and base conditioning. The four braided adsorbents demonstrated capacity values ranging from 3.7 to 4.2 g U/kg adsorbent after 56 days of exposure in natural coastal seawater at 20 oC. All data are normalized to a salinity of 35 psu.