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1.
Materials (Basel) ; 16(5)2023 Feb 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36902874

RESUMO

The overall need for the preparation of new medicinal radionuclides has led to the fast development of new sorption materials, extraction agents, and separation methods. Inorganic ion exchangers, mainly hydrous oxides, are the most widely used materials for the separation of medicinal radionuclides. One of the materials that has been studied for a long time is cerium dioxide, a competitive sorption material for the broadly used titanium dioxide. In this study, cerium dioxide was prepared through calcination of ceric nitrate and fully characterized using X-ray powder diffraction (XRPD), infrared spectrometry (FT-IR), scanning and transmission electron microscopy (SEM and TEM), thermogravimetric and differential thermal analysis (TG and DTA), dynamic light scattering (DLS), and analysis of surface area. In order to estimate the sorption mechanism and capacity of the prepared material, characterization of surface functional groups was carried out using acid-base titration and mathematical modeling. Subsequently, the sorption capacity of the prepared material for germanium was measured. It can be stated that the prepared material is prone to exchange anionic species in a wider range of pH than titanium dioxide. This characteristic makes the material superior as a matrix in 68Ge/68Ga radionuclide generators, and its suitability should be further studied in batch, kinetic, and column experiments.

2.
Sci Total Environ ; 584-585: 1032-1039, 2017 Apr 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28161047

RESUMO

Total mercury (T-Hg), elemental mercury (Hg0), methylmercury (MeHg+), phenylmercury (PhHg+), and gaseous elemental mercury (GEM) species were determined in soils formerly contaminated by different processes from two sites in the Czech Republic. Analytical methods involved atomic absorption spectrometry (AAS) using a single-purpose Advanced Mercury Analyser AMA-254 and radiochemical neutron activation analysis (RNAA) for T-Hg determination, a thermal desorption method was used for Hg0 determination, gas chromatography coupled with atomic fluorescence spectrometry (GC-AFS) was employed for assay of MeHg+ and PhHg+, while GEM measurement was carried out using a portable Zeeman-AAS device Lumex RA-915+. The first sampling site was in the surroundings of a former PhHgCl-based fungicide processing plant next to Príbram (central Bohemia). Although the use of Hg-based fungicides as seed mordant have been banned, and their production stopped at the end of 1980's, highly elevated Hg contents in soil are still observed in the vicinity of the former plant, reaching T-Hg values >13mgkg-1. The second sampling site was an abandoned mining area named Jedová hora Hill near Horovice (central Bohemia), where cinnabar (HgS) was occasionally mined as by-product of Fe ores hematite and siderite. Mining activities have been stopped here in 1857. Very high contents of T-Hg are still found at this site, up to 144mgkg-1. In most cases we found a statistically significant correlation between T-Hg and Hg0 values regardless of the pollution source. On the contrary, insignificant correlation was observed neither between T-Hg and GEM values, nor between GEM and Hg0. Concentrations of the investigated organomercury species were above a limit of detection (LOD) only in the most contaminated samples, where their levels were about two to three orders of magnitude lower compared to those of T-Hg.

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