4.7 Review

Review on metal extraction technologies suitable for critical metal recovery from mining and processing wastes

Journal

MINERALS ENGINEERING
Volume 182, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.mineng.2022.107537

Keywords

Atmospheric leaching; Bioleaching; Critical metals; Metal extraction; Phytomining; Pressure leaching; Resin-in-pulp; Solvometallurgy

Funding

  1. Department of Resources, Queensland [NEMI-UQ-06]

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The increasing demand for critical metals in the transition to low-carbon economies and advancements in high-tech has led to a global drive to find and develop these resources. Mining and processing wastes can provide significant concentrations of critical metals, but the extraction process requires suitable technologies.
The transition to low-carbon economies, advancements in high-tech and rapid uptake of electronic equipment will see increased demand over the coming decades for so-called critical metals: metals considered important to society and that are vulnerable to supply disruption. Consequently, there is now a global drive to find and develop critical metal resources. Significant concentrations of critical metals have reported to mining and pro-cessing wastes over time due to a range of factors, including unfavourable economics and unsuitable processing infrastructure. With expanding scope and scale of markets, mining and processing wastes now represent a largely un-tapped resource of critical metals. The reclamation of critical metals from solid mining and processing wastes involves mineral processing, metal extraction, and metal recovery. Metal extraction involves the separation of metals from a metal-bearing material using chemical reactions. Metal extraction from solid mining and pro-cessing wastes largely relies on established processing techniques. However, the overall process configuration can differ greatly from conventional primary production methods, and there is often an opportunity to streamline the reprocessing of wastes where the original production process has already done some of the required physical or chemical work. This review provides an overview of seven technologies: atmospheric leaching, pressure leaching, bioleaching, resin-in-pulp, pyrometallurgy, phytomining and solvometallurgy, that are suitable for extracting specific critical metals from solid mining and processing wastes. Eleven critical metals are considered in this review: cobalt, gallium, germanium, indium, lithium, nickel, rhenium, tellurium, tin, tungsten, and va-nadium. The approaches discussed are important for the extraction of critical metals from mining and processing wastes now and into the future.

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