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Home Science News Technology and Engineering

Biochar-Based Material Emerges as a Promising Solution for Uranium Extraction from Seawater

May 8, 2026
in Technology and Engineering
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Biochar-Based Material Emerges as a Promising Solution for Uranium Extraction from Seawater — Technology and Engineering

Biochar-Based Material Emerges as a Promising Solution for Uranium Extraction from Seawater

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A groundbreaking advancement in the quest to harness the vast uranium reserves dissolved in seawater has emerged from a team of innovative researchers. Uranium, a critical fuel for nuclear energy, is abundant in terrestrial ores but limited in distribution, prompting the exploration of alternative sources. Seawater, containing uranium at minute concentrations about a thousand times greater than land-based reserves, represents a virtually inexhaustible resource. Yet, the technical challenge remains formidable: the extraction of uranium selectively and efficiently amid a matrix teeming with competing ions.

In a recent publication in the journal Biochar, scientists unveiled a novel biochar-based composite, termed BN-PDA@Fe3S4, designed to revolutionize uranium recovery from seawater. The composite integrates biochar nanospheres adorned with a mussel-inspired polydopamine layer and decorated with iron sulfide (Fe3S4) nanoparticles. This hybrid material exhibits a remarkable synergy of adsorption and chemical reduction capabilities that enable not only the capture of hexavalent uranium [U(VI)] but also its partial transformation into tetravalent uranium [U(IV)], a less soluble and less toxic form.

Conventional adsorbents often struggle with selectivity, stability, and regeneration, particularly under the harsh saline and chemically complex environment of seawater. The BN-PDA@Fe3S4 composite addresses these limitations through its intricate structure. The biochar nanospheres provide a robust, high-surface-area scaffold. The polydopamine coating introduces abundant functional groups, such as amines and catechols, which enhance binding affinity toward metal ions. Crucially, the Fe3S4 nanoparticles present on the surface bring iron and sulfur species capable of reducing U(VI) to U(IV), thereby stabilizing the uranium on the adsorbent and minimizing environmental risks.

The synthesis of this composite follows a meticulously optimized two-step process. Initially, biochar nanospheres are functionalized with polydopamine to create a rich landscape of active sites. Subsequently, Fe3S4 nanoparticles are grown in situ onto this functionalized surface, ensuring intimate contact and electron transfer pathways crucial for uranium reduction. This hierarchical configuration facilitates rapid and selective uranium uptake, evidenced by laboratory tests demonstrating a maximal adsorption capacity surpassing 200 milligrams of U(VI) per gram of composite at pH 5 under ambient temperature.

Adsorption kinetics conform to the pseudo-second-order model, signifying chemisorption dominated by electron exchange or sharing, while equilibrium data fit the Langmuir isotherm, indicating monolayer coverage of uranium ions on homogeneous adsorption sites. Thermodynamically, the adsorption is spontaneous and endothermic, highlighting the enhanced uranium affinity with rising temperature—a favorable attribute for processing seawater across diverse environmental conditions.

The complexity of seawater, laden with ions such as sodium, magnesium, calcium, carbonate, and sulfate, presents significant hurdles for selective uranium recovery. Experiments incorporating coexisting ions revealed that while some, especially carbonate and sulfate, adversely affect uranium capture by forming stable, soluble uranium complexes, the BN-PDA@Fe3S4 composite maintains robust performance. Extended trials in simulated natural seawater exhibited an extraction capacity of approximately 4.5 milligrams per gram over 15 days, an encouraging metric for real-world applications.

Integral to the composite’s function is its dual mechanism of adsorption and redox transformation. Spectroscopic investigations, including X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, confirmed that uranium is not merely immobilized but partially reduced from U(VI) to U(IV) on the material surface. This redox conversion is primarily driven by the Fe(II) and S(-II) species inherent in Fe3S4, which donate electrons to uranium ions. The polydopamine layer, rich in amino groups, also contributes to uranium binding through coordination interactions. Computational studies employing density functional theory further substantiated strong binding affinities and electron transfer potentials between uranium species and the Fe3S4-decorated surface.

Beyond its uranium capture efficiency, the BN-PDA@Fe3S4 composite boasts magnetic properties imparted by the Fe3S4 nanoparticles. This magnetic separability enables facile recovery and regeneration of the adsorbent using external magnetic fields, enhancing operational practicality. Moreover, the composite demonstrates antibacterial activity against Staphylococcus aureus and Escherichia coli, a feature that may confer resistance to biofouling—a persistent obstacle in marine-based extraction systems—thus prolonging functional lifespan and reducing maintenance.

While these pioneering findings mark a significant leap forward, the research acknowledges the necessity for further advancements, particularly concerning the long-term cycling stability and performance under dynamic oceanic conditions. Continued refinement of structural properties and regeneration protocols will be essential to transition this technology from laboratory-scale proof-of-concept to large-scale industrial deployment.

The innovative BN-PDA@Fe3S4 material epitomizes a multifaceted approach integrating adsorption, chemical reduction, magnetic recovery, and antimicrobial defense. It offers a promising pathway toward sustainable nuclear fuel recovery from seawater—a critical stride in meeting future energy demands while mitigating environmental and geopolitical challenges associated with terrestrial uranium mining. This work not only advances the field of environmental material science but also exemplifies how bio-inspired and nanostructured materials can address one of the planet’s pressing energy resource challenges.

The implications of this research extend beyond uranium extraction. The demonstrated hybrid strategy could inform the design of next-generation adsorbents targeting a spectrum of radionuclides and heavy metals in contaminated waters. Harnessing the synergy between biochar platforms, functional coatings, and reactive inorganic nanoparticles may catalyze broader applications in environmental remediation and resource recovery sectors, aligning with global sustainability goals.

As nuclear energy continues to play a pivotal role in decarbonizing the global energy portfolio, innovations like the BN-PDA@Fe3S4 composite underscore the critical nexus of advanced materials science and environmental engineering. They pave the way for unlocking the vast, untapped potential of seawater uranium, ensuring a more resilient and equitable supply chain for the clean energy technologies of tomorrow.


Subject of Research: Experimental study on biochar-based nanocomposite for uranium recovery from seawater.

Article Title: Synergistic adsorptive reduction for enhanced U(VI) recovery from seawater via Fe3S4-decorated biochar nanosphere hybrids.

News Publication Date: 8-May-2026.

Web References: DOI: 10.1007/s42773-026-00605-z.

References: Zhang, S., Liu, SS., Liu, D. et al. Biochar 8, 99 (2026).

Image Credits: Shijing Zhang, Shuang-Shuang Liu, Daiming Liu, Geyi Xu, Mengting Huang, Yuhui Zeng & Si Luo.

Keywords

Uranium recovery, seawater extraction, biochar nanospheres, polydopamine coating, Fe3S4 nanoparticles, adsorptive reduction, nuclear fuel, environmental remediation, magnetic separability, biofouling resistance, chemisorption kinetics, experimental materials science.

Tags: advanced materials for metal recoverybiochar nanospheres for adsorptionbiochar-based uranium extractionBN-PDA@Fe3S4 compositehexavalent to tetravalent uranium transformationiron sulfide nanoparticles in adsorptionmussel-inspired polydopamine coatingnuclear fuel from seawaterselective uranium adsorptionsustainable uranium harvesting methodsuranium extraction in saline environmentsuranium recovery from seawater
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