4.8 Review

Making sustainable aluminum by recycling scrap: The science of dirty alloys

Journal

PROGRESS IN MATERIALS SCIENCE
Volume 128, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.pmatsci.2022.100947

Keywords

Aluminum; Alloy design; Precipitation; Sustainability; Recycling; Properties; Processing; Corrosion; Thermodynamics

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China
  2. Construction of Innovative Hunan Province of China
  3. Northwestern University Center for Atom-Probe Tomography (NUCAPT)
  4. NSF-MRI
  5. ONR-DURIP
  6. MRSEC program
  7. SHyNE Resource
  8. nitiative for Sustainability and Energy (ISEN) at Northwestern University [U2032117]
  9. Office of Naval Research [2019RS1001]
  10. EPSRC, LightForm Programme grant
  11. Austrian Federal Ministry for Digital and Economic Affairs [DMR-0420532]
  12. National Foundation for Research, Technology and Development [N00014-0400798, N00014-0610539, N00014-0910781, N00014-1712870]
  13. Christian Doppler Research Association [NSF DMR-1720139]
  14. Austrian Federal Government [NSF ECCS-2025633]
  15. Styrian and the Tyrolean Provincial Government
  16. Standortagentur Tirol
  17. Australian Research Council [EP/R001715/1]
  18. [LE0454166]
  19. Australian Research Council [LE0454166] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Aluminum has both positive and negative impacts on sustainability. Recycling aluminum can improve sustainability, while extracting it from ores is energy-intensive. The amount of recyclable aluminum is expected to double by 2050, offering an opportunity for a circular economy. However, the presence of elemental contamination in post-consumer scrap poses challenges for alloy design.
There are several facets of aluminum when it comes to sustainability. While it helps to save fuel due to its low density, producing it from ores is very energy-intensive. Recycling it shifts the balance towards higher sustainability, because the energy needed to melt aluminum from scrap is only about 5% of that consumed in ore reduction. The amount of aluminum available for recycling is estimated to double by 2050. This offers an opportunity to bring the metallurgical sector closer to a circular economy. A challenge is that large amounts of scrap are post-consumer scrap, containing high levels of elemental contamination. This has to be taken into account in more sustainable alloy design strategies. A green aluminum trend has already triggered a new trading platform for low-carbon aluminum at the London Metal Exchange (2020). The trend may lead to limits on the use of less-sustainable materials in future products. The shift from primary synthesis (ore reduction) to secondary synthesis (scrap melting) requires to gain better understanding of how multiple scrap-related contaminant elements act on aluminum alloys and how future alloys can be designed upfront to become scrap-compatible and composition-tolerant. The paper therefore discusses the influence of scrap-related impurities on the thermodynamics and kinetics of precipitation reactions and their mechanical and electrochemical effects; impurity effects on precipitation-free zones around grain boundaries; their effects on casting microstructures; and the possibilities presented by adjusting processing parameters and the associated mechanical, functional and chemical properties. The objective is to foster the design and production of aluminum alloys with the highest possible scrap fractions, using even low-quality scrap and scrap types which match only a few target alloys when recycled.

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