Issue 6, 2002

An eco-friendly novel separation of carrier-free thallium radionuclide from mercury and lead radionuclides using algae as bio-reagent

Abstract

Here we report a novel separation technique for the clinically important 199Tl radionuclide from its precursor lead and daughter product mercury. Two algal genera, Lyngbya major, from cyanophyceae and Rhizoclonium hieroglyphicum from chlorophyceae have been used as natural bioreagents in the separation of thallium radionuclides in ultra-trace scale. 24 h algal treatment of an aqueous solution at pH 8 containing a mixture of radionuclides shows that Rhizoclonium accumulates 100% Hg, >80% Pb and a small fraction of thallium (15%). Thus a large fraction of thallium remains in the solution not accumulated by algae. Thus the selectivity of various algae towards different metals in sorption and desorption processes may be exploited in the separation of these metals from a mixture of them.

Graphical abstract: An eco-friendly novel separation of carrier-free thallium radionuclide from mercury and lead radionuclides using algae as bio-reagent

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
23 Aug 2002
First published
16 Oct 2002

Green Chem., 2002,4, 581-583

An eco-friendly novel separation of carrier-free thallium radionuclide from mercury and lead radionuclides using algae as bio-reagent

D. Nayak, S. Lahiri, A. Mukhopadhyay and R. Pal, Green Chem., 2002, 4, 581 DOI: 10.1039/B208276D

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