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The recovery of rare earth elements from waste electrical and electronic equipment: A review

Journal

HYDROMETALLURGY
Volume 222, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.hydromet.2023.106156

Keywords

Rare earth elements; Critical metals; Urban mining; Recycling; WEEE

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Rare earth elements (REE) are critical metals with high supply risk and growing demand. Waste electrical and electronic equipment (WEEE) is a potential secondary source for recovering REE, but there are challenges and gaps in the recovery process. Hydrometallurgical processes using sulfuric acid have been mainly studied, and sequential processes and recovery from different residues are lacking.
Rare earth elements (REE) are considered critical metals due to their supply risk and growing demand in various industrial segments. Waste electrical and electronic equipment (WEEE) is a potential secondary source for recovering REE which remains unexplored on a commercial scale. Moreover, the process lacks consolidated routes, and the literature has only studied the recovery of some of the 15 REE. This systematic review describes the conditions and procedures applied to fluorescent lamps, cathode-ray tube phosphors, neodymium magnets, nickel-metal hydride batteries, printed circuit boards, LED waste, and other secondary sources to identify the challenges and gaps of recovering REE. Yttrium, neodymium, and cerium are the most commonly recovered elements. With the highest concentration of REE in its composition, NdFeB magnet residues are the most investigated as a secondary REE source. The literature highlights the use of hydrometallurgical processes to recover these elements and sulfuric acid as the most used leaching agent. The absence of studies evaluating sequential processes to recover base metals and precious and rare earth elements is well known. Note also the lack of studies investigating recovery from a mix of different residues. Additionally, to make the process more attractive to the market, researchers must conduct studies on the scale-up and economic viability of these processes.

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