4.8 Article

fPreferential Recovery of Rare-Earth Elements from Coal Fly Ash Using a Recyclable Ionic Liquid

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 55, Issue 13, Pages 9209-9220

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.1c00630

Keywords

ionic liquids; rare-earth elements; coal combustion residuals; green chemistry; resource recovery; critical materials; waste management

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship
  2. Georgia Power Fellowship
  3. Environmental Research and Education Foundation

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A new valorization process using ionic liquid for preferential extraction of rare-earth elements (REEs) from coal fly ash (CFA) has been developed. Alkaline pretreatment significantly improves REE leaching efficiency from recalcitrant CFAs, while weathered CFAs show slightly higher REE leaching efficiency than unweathered ones. Additionally, a particular high extraction efficiency for scandium is consistently exhibited across different CFAs using this method.
Recent global geopolitical tensions have exacerbated the scarcity of rare-earth elements (REEs), which are critical across many industries. REE-rich coal fly ash (CFA), a coal combustion residual, has been proposed as a potential source. Conventional REE-CFA recovery methods are energy- and material-intensive and leach elements indiscriminately. This study has developed a new valorization process based on the ionic liquid (IL) betainium bis-(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide ([Hbet][Tf2N]) for preferential extraction of REEs from different CFAs. Efficient extraction relies on [Hbet][Tf2N]'s thermomorphic behavior with water: upon heating, water and the IL form a single liquid phase, and REEs are leached from CFA via a proton-exchange mechanism. Upon cooling, the water and IL separate, and leached elements partition between the two phases. REEs were preferentially extracted over bulk elements from CFAs into the IL phase and then recovered in a subsequent mild-acid stripping step, regenerating the IL. Alkaline pretreatment significantly improved REE leaching efficiency from recalcitrant Class-F CFAs, and additional betaine improved REE and bulk element separation. Weathered CFA showed slightly higher REE leaching efficiency than unweathered CFA, and Class-C CFA demonstrated higher leaching efficiency but less selective partitioning than Class-F CFAs. Significantly, this method consistently exhibits a particularly high extraction efficiency for scandium across different CFAs.

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