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Amyloid hybrid membranes for removal of clinical and nuclear radioactive wastewater

Nuclear medicine uses various radioactive compounds for the administration into patients to diagnose and treat diseases, which generates large amounts of radioactively contaminated water. Currently, radioactively contaminated hospital wastewater has to be stored until the contained radionuclides hav...

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Published in:Environmental science water research & technology 2020-12, Vol.6 (12), p.3249-3254
Main Authors: Bolisetty, Sreenath, Coray, Nastasia M, Palika, Archana, Prenosil, George A, Mezzenga, Raffaele
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description Nuclear medicine uses various radioactive compounds for the administration into patients to diagnose and treat diseases, which generates large amounts of radioactively contaminated water. Currently, radioactively contaminated hospital wastewater has to be stored until the contained radionuclides have sufficiently decayed because cost-effective and efficient removal technologies are not available. Similar considerations apply in the nuclear power industry, with, however, decay times of the radionuclides several orders of magnitude higher. Previously, we reported hybrid membranes composed of amyloid fibrils produced from cheap and readily available proteins and activated carbon, which efficiently removed heavy metal ions and radioactive compounds from water. Here, we show that these membranes are highly efficient in the adsorption & removal of diverse, clinically relevant radioactive compounds from hospital wastewater by single-step filtration. The radionuclides technetium (Tc-99m), iodine (I-123) and gallium (Ga-68) can be removed from water with efficiencies above 99.8% in one single step. We also demonstrate the purification of a real clinical wastewater sample from a Swiss hospital containing iodine (I-131) and lutetium (Lu-177). With the use of single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) and positron emission tomography (PET), we were able to visualize the accumulation of the radioactive compounds within the membrane and demonstrate its outstanding performance. By converting large volumes of radioactive wastewater into low volumes of solid radioactive waste, the present technology emerges as a possible game-changer in the treatment of nuclear wastewater. Highly efficient hybrid amyloid membrane to remove clinical and nuclear radioactive wastewater.
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source Royal Society of Chemistry:Jisc Collections:Royal Society of Chemistry Read and Publish 2022-2024 (reading list)
subjects Activated carbon
Amyloid
Computed tomography
Electric industries
Fibrils
Gallium
Heavy metals
Hospital wastes
Iodine
Lutetium
Medical wastes
Medicine
Membranes
Metal ions
Metals
Nuclear energy
Nuclear medicine
Photon emission
Positron emission
Positron emission tomography
Radioactive contamination
Radioactive wastes
Radioactive wastewaters
Radioisotopes
Radionuclide kinetics
Removal
Single photon emission computed tomography
Solid wastes
Technetium
Tomography
Wastewater
Wastewater pollution
Wastewater treatment
Water pollution
Water purification
title Amyloid hybrid membranes for removal of clinical and nuclear radioactive wastewater
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