4.5 Review

Rare Earths' Recovery from Phosphogypsum: An Overview on Direct and Indirect Leaching Techniques

Journal

MINERALS
Volume 11, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/min11101051

Keywords

rare earths; phosphogypsum; acid leaching; bioleaching; recrystallization; carbonation

Funding

  1. Water Research commission (WRC) of South Africa [WRC K5/2483]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The demand for rare earth elements in high tech electrical and electronic materials is crucial, but the natural deposits are limited globally, prompting the search for alternative resources. Utilizing hydrometallurgical processes to extract REEs from scrap and waste materials is sustainable and feasible, offering low energy consumption, minimal waste generation, and environmentally friendly benefits. The concentration of REEs in industrial waste such as phosphogypsum is low, making the recovery process challenging, but methods like recrystallization show promising advantages for achieving high REE recovery.
The need for rare earths elements (REEs) in high tech electrical and electronic based materials are vital. In the global economy, deposits of natural REEs are limited except for countries such as China, which has prompted current attempts to seek alternative resources of REEs. This increased the dependence on major secondary rare earth-bearing sources such as scrap alloy, battery waste, spent catalysts, fly ash, spent magnets, waste light-emitting diodes (LEDs), and phosphogypsum (PG) for a substantial recovery of REEs for use. Recycling of REEs from these alternative waste sources through hydrometallurgical processes is becoming a sustainable and viable approach due to the low energy consumption, low waste generation, few emissions, environmentally friendliness, and economically feasibility. Industrial wastes such as the PG generated from the production of phosphoric acid is a potential secondary resource of REEs that contains a total REE concentration of over 2000 mg/kg depending upon the phosphate ore from which it is generated. Due to trace concentration of REEs in the PG (normally < 0.1% wt.) and their tiny and complex occurrence as mineral phases the recovery process of REE from PG would be highly challenging in both technology and economy. Various physicochemical pre-treatments approaches have been used up to date to up-concentrate REEs from PG prior to their extraction. Methods such as carbonation, roasting, microwave heating, grinding or recrystallization have been widely used for this purpose. This present paper reviews recent literature on various techniques that are currently employed to up-concentrate REs from PG to provide preliminary insight into further critical raw materials recovery. In addition, the advantages and disadvantages of the different strategies are discussed as avenues for realization of REE recovery from PG at a larger scale. In all the different approaches, recrystallization of PG appears to show promising advantages due to both high REE recovery as well as the pure PG phase that can be obtained.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available