A radiation-resistant supermacroporous aerogel for ultrafast and high-capacity gaseous iodine capture

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Abstract

Efficient capture of radioactive gaseous iodine is crucial for the safe management of nuclear waste. However, most existing adsorbents suffer from low capacity, slow kinetics, high cost, or poor radiation stability. Herein, a simple aqueous cryo-polymerization strategy was developed to construct a polyethyleneimine-functionalized poly (acrylic acid) aerogel (PEI@PAA), enabling simultaneous ice-templated macropore formation, in-situ polymerization, and crosslinking. The resulting aerogel features a highly interconnected three-dimensional (3D) macroporous network (10~100 μm), which facilitates the rapid diffusion of iodine vapor. Meanwhile, abundant amino groups (RNH2, R2NH, R3N) act as chemical adsorption sites through charge-transfer interactions. The PEI@PAA aerogel exhibits an exceptionally high iodine uptake of 6.01 g·g-1 and achieves 90% of its saturation capacity within 4 h, which demonstrates a 10-fold kinetic enhancement over that of Ag-loaded zeolites. Benefiting from the robust gel network and continuous pore structure, the aerogel maintains a high capacity of 5.14~5.28 g·g-1 after exposure to 50 kGy of β/γ irradiation, with negligible structural degradation. This green and energy-efficient method eliminates the need for freeze-drying, offering a scalable and sustainable platform for the next generation of iodine adsorbents in nuclear waste treatment.

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