4.4 Article

A study on selective leaching of heavy metals vs. iron from fly ash

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATERIAL CYCLES AND WASTE MANAGEMENT
Volume 21, Issue 4, Pages 1004-1013

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10163-019-00858-w

Keywords

Circular economy; Waste gas purification dust; Mineral acid; Organic acid; Ethaline

Funding

  1. Aalto University
  2. Fortum Oy
  3. CMEco (Circular Metal Ecosystem, Business Finland, Tekes) [7405/31/2016]
  4. Clic Innovation Oy as part of the Material Values Chains, ARVI project
  5. RawMatTERS Finland Infrastructure (RAMI) at Aalto University (Academy of Finland)

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Incinerator plant waste streams contain underexploited metals originating from households and industrial operators. The objective was to investigate the dissolution behavior of fly ash in: 0.2-7M HCl, 0.2-7M H2SO4, 0.5-1M oxalic acid, 0.5-4M citric acid, 0.5-7M acetic acid, water, and ethaline, at 33 degrees C during 24h leaching. The capability for high metals' extraction of Zn, Cu, Ni, Pb, and Fe and management of the heavy metal Pb through leaching or precipitation was investigated. Selective leaching of valuable metals vs. Fe was observed. The target was to find a sustainable leaching method and provide a basis for further development of metal recovery from fly ash. The highest Zn extraction (>80%) was achieved with 3M H2SO4 and 7M HCl, which also dissolved Cu (>87%) and Ni (>65%). However, more dilute HCl, 0.2M, was able to provide Zn, Cu, and Ni extractions of 43, 86, and 18%, respectively. Efficient Pb leaching was achieved in HClcomplete extraction was provided by 3 and 5M HCl, whereas H2SO4 did not extract Pb due to PbSO4 formation; similarly, in oxalic acid, Pb precipitated as PbC2O4. Ethaline could extract 50% of Pb with high selectivity towards Fe.

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