4.7 Article

Exploiting end-of-life lamps fluorescent powder e-waste as a secondary resource for critical rare earth metals

Journal

RESOURCES CONSERVATION AND RECYCLING
Volume 164, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.resconrec.2020.105153

Keywords

Rare earth metals; Circular economy; Resource management; Lamp fluorescent powder e-waste; Recycling; Hydrometallurgy; Liquid-liquid extraction

Funding

  1. Federal Office for the Environment, Switzerland (FOEN, CH) [UTF-1011-05300]
  2. Swiss Competence Center for Energy Research in the field of Biomass for Swiss Energy Future (SCCER BIOSWEET, CH)
  3. Energy System Integration Platform (ESI, CH)

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With the growing consensus on the UN sustainable development goals, there is a need for circular resources and economies in a digital society context. A cost-effective recycling method for single REEs from end-of-life lamp e-waste is presented, demonstrating high recovery rates and less environmental impact compared to mining.
The consensus is growing for the UN sustainable development goals regarding responsible consumption, production, and climate actions. Because of growth towards a digital society (industry 4.0 revolution), it is needed to have our resources and economies to be circular. The success also depends on appropriate management of critical raw materials, such as Rare Earth Elements (REEs). Here, a cost-effective recycling method for the recovery of single REEs from fluorescent powder (FP) with end-of-life lamp e-waste is presented with the additional benefit of having a much less environmental impact than mining. The recycling method involves a carefully designed sequential digestion of two phosphor components (YOX and LAP) and treating their leachates separately under specific hydrometallurgical conditions. The phosphors were targeted for Yttrium (Y), Europium (Eu), Terbium (Tb), Lanthanum (La), Cerium (Ce), and Gadolinium (Gd). On trace REEs basis, the leaching process with the FP showed > 95% recovery for Eu, La, Ce, Y and Tb. The effective recycling was achieved to > 99% purity for Y, Eu, and Tb in 1, 25, and 55 liquid-liquid extraction stages, respectively. To our knowledge, this is one of the first methods to leach and separate Tb from FP e-waste with near quantitative leaching efficiency and > 99% purity.

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