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AI helps discover optimal new material for removing radioactive iodine contamination

Researchers use AI to discover optimal new material for removing radioactive iodine contamination
Credit: Journal of Hazardous Materials (2025). DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2025.138735

Managing radioactive waste is one of the core challenges in the use of nuclear energy. In particular, radioactive iodine poses serious environmental and health risks due to its long half-life (15.7 million years in the case of I-129), high mobility, and toxicity to living organisms.

A Korean research team has successfully used artificial intelligence to discover a new material that can remove iodine for nuclear environmental remediation. The team plans to push forward with commercialization through various industry鈥揳cademia collaborations, from iodine-adsorbing powders to contaminated water treatment filters.

Professor Ho Jin Ryu's research team from the Department of Nuclear and Quantum Engineering, in collaboration with Dr. Juhwan Noh of the Digital Chemistry Research Center at the Korea Research Institute of Chemical Technology, developed a technique using AI to discover new materials that effectively remove contaminants. Their research is in the Journal of Hazardous Materials.

Recent studies show that radioactive iodine primarily exists in aqueous environments in the form of iodate (IO鈧冣伝). However, existing silver-based adsorbents have weak chemical adsorption strength for iodate, making them inefficient. Therefore, it is imperative to develop new adsorbent materials that can effectively remove iodate.

Professor Ho Jin Ryu's team used a machine learning-based experimental strategy to identify optimal iodate adsorbents among compounds called Layered Double Hydroxides (LDHs), which contain various metal elements.

The multi-metal LDH developed in this study鈥擟u鈧(CrFeAl), based on copper, chromium, iron, and aluminum鈥攕howed exceptional adsorption performance, removing more than 90% of iodate. This achievement was made possible by efficiently exploring a vast compositional space using AI-driven active learning, which would be difficult to search through conventional trial-and-error experiments.

The research team focused on the fact that LDHs, like high-entropy materials, can incorporate a wide range of metal compositions and possess structures favorable for anion adsorption. However, due to the overwhelming number of possible metal combinations in multi-metal LDHs, identifying the optimal composition through traditional experimental methods has been nearly impossible.

To overcome this, the team employed AI (). Starting with from 24 binary and 96 ternary LDH compositions, they expanded their search to include quaternary and quinary candidates. As a result, they were able to discover the optimal material for iodate removal by testing only 16% of the total candidate materials.

Professor Ho Jin Ryu said, "This study shows the potential of using to efficiently identify radioactive decontamination materials from a vast pool of new material candidates, which is expected to accelerate research for developing new materials for nuclear environmental cleanup."

The research team has filed a domestic patent application for the developed powder technology and is currently proceeding with an international patent application. They plan to enhance the material's performance under various conditions and pursue commercialization through industry-academia cooperation in the development of filters for treating contaminated water.

More information: Sujeong Lee et al, Discovery of multi-metal-layered double hydroxides for decontamination of iodate by machine learning-assisted experiments, Journal of Hazardous Materials (2025).

Journal information: Journal of Hazardous Materials

Citation: AI helps discover optimal new material for removing radioactive iodine contamination (2025, July 3) retrieved 3 July 2025 from /news/2025-07-ai-optimal-material-radioactive-iodine.html
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