A
Cleaner Process for Selective Recovery of Valuable
Metals from Electronic Waste of Complex Mixtures of End-of-Life Electronic
Products
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Abstract
In
recent years, recovery of metals from electronic waste within
the European Union has become increasingly important due to potential
supply risk of strategic raw material and environmental concerns.
Electronic waste, especially a mixture of end-of-life electronic products
from a variety of sources, is of inherently high complexity in composition,
phase, and physiochemical properties. In this research, a closed-loop
hydrometallurgical process was developed to recover valuable metals,
i.e., copper and precious metals, from an industrially processed information
and communication technology waste. A two-stage leaching design of
this process was adopted in order to selectively extract copper and
enrich precious metals. It was found that the recovery efficiency
and extraction selectivity of copper both reached more than 95% by
using ammonia-based leaching solutions. A new electrodeposition process
has been proven feasible with 90% current efficiency during copper
recovery, and the copper purity can reach 99.8 wt %. The residue from
the first-stage leaching was screened into coarse and fine fractions.
The coarse fraction was returned to be releached for further copper
recovery. The fine fraction was treated in the second-stage leaching
using sulfuric acid to further concentrate precious metals, which
could achieve a 100% increase in their concentrations in the residue
with negligible loss into the leaching solution. By a combination
of different leaching steps and proper physical separation of light
materials, this process can achieve closed-loop recycling of the waste
with significant efficiency