4.8 Article

Selective recovery of precious metals through photocatalysis

Journal

NATURE SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 4, Issue 7, Pages 618-626

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41893-021-00697-4

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2020YFA0211004]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21876114, 21761142011]
  3. Shanghai Government [19DZ1205102, 19160712900, 18JC1412900]
  4. Chinese Education Ministry Key Laboratory and International Joint Laboratory on Resource Chemistry
  5. Shanghai Eastern Scholar Program
  6. Shanghai Engineering Research Center of Green Energy Chemical Engineering [18DZ2254200]

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This article presents a greener photocatalytic process for recovering up to seven precious metals from waste, demonstrating its potential for wide application and importance in implementing a circular economy.
Recovering precious resources from waste is essential to implement a circular economy, but the available methods carry environmental costs. In this Article, a greener photocatalytic process is shown to recover up to seven precious metals from waste successfully, offering the potential for wide application. Precious metals such as gold and platinum are valued materials for a variety of important applications, but their scarcity poses a risk of supply disruption. Recycling precious metals from waste provides a promising solution; however, conventional metallurgical methods bear high environmental costs and energy consumption. Here, we report a photocatalytic process that enables one to selectively retrieve seven precious metals-silver (Ag), gold (Au), palladium (Pd), platinum (Pt), rhodium (Rh), ruthenium (Ru) and iridium (Ir)-from waste circuit boards, ternary automotive catalysts and ores. The whole process does not involve strong acids or bases or toxic cyanide, but needs only light and photocatalysts such as titanium dioxide (TiO2). More than 99% of the targeted elements in the waste sources can be dissolved and the precious metals recovered after a simple reducing reaction that shows a high purity (>= 98%). By demonstrating success at the kilogram scale and showing that the catalysts can be reused more than 100 times, we suggest that this approach might be industry compatible. This research opens up a new path in the development of sustainable technologies for recycling the Earth's resources and contributing to a circular economy.

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