METHOD AND SYSTEM FOR SUPERCRITICAL FLUID EXTRACTION OF METAL
20210265678 · 2021-08-26
Assignee
Inventors
- GISELE AZIMI (Toronto, CA)
- Yuxiang Bill Yao (Calgary, CA)
- Jiakai Zhang (Toronto, CA)
- John Joseph Naguib Anawati (Ottawa, CA)
Cpc classification
B01J19/18
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J3/008
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J3/002
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C22B11/046
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Y02W30/84
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
Y02P20/54
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
B01J3/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C22B3/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
A method for supercritical fluid extraction of metal from a source, the method comprising: providing a reactor chamber; providing a source comprising a target metal; optionally, providing a chelating agent; providing a solvent; adding the source comprising the target metal, the chelating agent and the solvent into the reactor chamber; adjusting the temperature and pressure in the reactor chamber so that the solvent is heated and compressed above its critical temperature and pressure; optionally, providing mechanical agitation to the reactor chamber; recovering a chelate comprising the target metal.
Claims
1. A method for supercritical fluid extraction of a metal from a source, the method comprising: providing a reactor chamber; providing a source comprising a target metal; providing a chelating agent; providing a solvent; optionally, providing a co-solvent; adding the source comprising the target metal, the chelating agent, the solvent and optionally the co-solvent into the reactor chamber; adjusting the temperature and pressure in the reactor chamber so that the solvent is heated and compressed above its critical temperature and pressure; optionally, providing mechanical agitation to the reactor chamber; and recovering a chelate comprising the target metal.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the chelating agent is one or more compounds selected from the group consisting of an organophosphorus compound, a ketone, a dithiocarbamate, a crown ether, an ethylene oxide diphosphate derivative, a fluorinated compound, 8-hydroxyquinoline or a derivative thereof, an aminopolycarboxylic acid, an amide, an organic acid, a quaternary ammonium salt and an oxime.
3-15. (canceled)
16. The method of claim 1, wherein the solvent is one or more compounds selected from the group consisting of CO.sub.2, water, methanol, ethanol, benzene and toluene.
17-18. (canceled)
19. The method of claim 1, wherein: the co-solvent is one or more compounds selected from the group consisting of methanol, water, ethanol, acetone, hexane, chloroform, dichloromethane, toluene, acetonitrile, tetrahydrofuran, aniline, diethylamine, acetic acid, ethyl acetate, 2-propanol and an imidazolium-based ionic compound; or the co-solvent is added to the reactor chamber in an amount of about 0.01 to about 50 mol %.
20-21. (canceled)
22. The method of claim 1, wherein: the temperature in the reactor chamber is adjusted to a range of about 20 to about 200° C.; or the pressure in the reactor chamber is adjusted to a range of about 0.01 to about 45 MPa; or the source comprising the target metal, the chelating agent and the solvent are allowed to react in the reactor chamber for a residence time in a range of about 0.01 to about 12 hours; or the source comprising the target metal and the chelating agent are added in a source-to-chelating agent ratio in the range of about 0.01 to about 5; or the method comprises providing mechanical agitation to the reactor chamber and the source comprising the target metal, the chelating agent and the solvent are subjected to an agitation rate in a range of about 0.01 to about 2500 rpm; or the chelating agent comprises HNO.sub.3 in a concentration of about 0.01 to about 21.4 M.
23-27. (canceled)
28. The method of claim 1, wherein the source is a NiMH battery and the target metal is one or more rare earth elements.
29. The method of claim 28, wherein: the temperature in the reactor chamber is adjusted to a range of about 35 to about 55° C.; or the pressure in the reactor chamber is adjusted to a range of about 20.7 to about 31 MPa; or the source comprising the target metal, the chelating agent and the solvent are allowed to react in the reactor chamber for a residence time in a range of about 1 to about 2 hours; or the source comprising the target metal and the chelating agent are added in a source-to-chelating agent ratio in the range of about 0.1 to about 0.2; or the method comprises providing mechanical agitation to the reactor chamber and the source comprising the target metal, the chelating agent and the solvent are subjected to an agitation rate in a range of about 750 to about 1500 rpm; or the chelating agent comprises HNO.sub.3 in a concentration of about 10.4 to about 15.7 M; or the method further comprises providing methanol and adding the methanol to the reactor chamber in an amount of about 0.01 to about 2 mol %.
30-42. (canceled)
43. The method of claim 1, wherein the source is a permanent magnet and the target metal is one or more rare earth elements.
44. The method of claim 43, wherein: the temperature in the reactor chamber is adjusted to a range of about 35 to about 55° C.; or the pressure in the reactor chamber is adjusted to a range of about 20.7 to about 31 MPa; or wherein the source comprising the target metal, the chelating agent and the solvent are allowed to react in the reactor chamber for a residence time in a range of about 1 to about 2 hours; or the source comprising the target metal and the chelating agent are added in a source-to-chelating agent ratio in the range of about 0.1 to about 0.2; or the method comprises providing mechanical agitation to the reactor chamber and the source comprising the target metal, the chelating agent and the solvent are subjected to an agitation rate in a range of about 750 to about 1500 rpm; or the chelating agent comprises HNO.sub.3 in a concentration of about 10.4 to about 15.7 M; or the method further comprises providing methanol and adding the methanol to the reactor chamber in an amount of about 0.01 to about 2 mol %.
45-57. (canceled)
58. The method of claim 1, wherein the source is a phosphor and the target metal is one or more rare earth elements.
59. The method of claim 58, wherein: the temperature in the reactor chamber is adjusted to a range of about 50 to about 70° C.; or the pressure in the reactor chamber is adjusted to a range of about 20.7 to about 45 MPa; or the source comprising the target metal, the chelating agent and the solvent are allowed to react in the reactor chamber for a residence time in a range of about 0.01 to about 3 hours; or the source comprising the target metal and the chelating agent are added in a source-to-chelating agent ratio in the range of about 0.05 to about 0.1; or the method comprises providing mechanical agitation to the reactor chamber and the source comprising the target metal, the chelating agent and the solvent are subjected to an agitation rate in a range of about 0.01 to about 750 rpm; or the chelating agent comprises HNO.sub.3 in a concentration of about 15.7 to about 21.4 M; or the method further comprises providing methanol and adding the methanol to the reactor chamber in an amount of about 0.01 to about 2 mol %; or the chelating agent is selected from the group consisting of tributyl phosphate (TBP), bis(2-ethylhexyl) phosphate (DEHPA), mono-(2-ethylhexyl)-2-ethylhexyl-phosphate (HEHEHP), bis(2,4,4-trimethylpentyl)phosphinic acid, bis(2,4,4-trimethylpentyl)dithiophosphinic acid, bis(2,4,4-trimethylpentyl)octylphosphine oxide, neodecanoic acid and 16,16-dimethylheptadecan-1-amine.
60-70. (canceled)
71. The method of claim 1, wherein the source is bauxite residue and the target metal is one or more rare earth elements.
72. The method of claim 71, wherein: the temperature in the reactor chamber is adjusted to a range of about 35 to about 55° C.; or the pressure in the reactor chamber is adjusted to a range of about 20.7 to about 45 MPa; or the source comprising the target metal, the chelating agent and the solvent are allowed to react in the reactor chamber for a residence time in a range of about 0.01 to about 2.0 hours; or the source comprising the target metal and the chelating agent are added in a source-to-chelating agent ratio in the range of about 0.05 to about 0.2; or the method comprises providing mechanical agitation to the reactor chamber and the source comprising the target metal, the chelating agent and the solvent are subjected to an agitation rate in a range of about 1500 to about 2500 rpm; or the chelating agent comprises HNO3 in a concentration of about 15.7 to about 21.4 M; or the method further comprises providing a co-solvent and adding the co-solvent to the reactor chamber in an amount of about 0.01 to about 10 mol %; or the chelating agent is selected from the group consisting of tributyl phosphate (TBP), bis(2-ethylhexyl) phosphate (DEHPA), mono-(2-ethylhexyl)-2-ethylhexyl-phosphate (HEHEHP), bis(2,4,4-trimethylpentyl)phosphinic acid, bis(2,4,4-trimethylpentyl)dithiophosphinic acid, bis(2,4,4-trimethylpentyl)octylphosphine oxide, neodecanoic acid and 16,16-dimethylheptadecan-1-amine; or the chelating agent comprises an acid selected from the group consisting of nitric acid, sulfuric acid, hydrochloric acid, phosphoric acid, hydrofluoric acid, citric acid, acetic acid and oxalic acid.
73-78. (canceled)
79. The method of claim 72, wherein the co-solvent is methanol or oxalic acid solution in water.
80-81. (canceled)
82. The method of claim 71, further comprising a pre-neutralization step.
83. The method of claim 1, wherein the source is a lithium ion battery and the target metal is selected from the group consisting of lithium, nickel, and cobalt.
84. The method of claim 83, wherein: the temperature in the reactor chamber is adjusted to a range of about 35 to about 55° C.; or the pressure in the reactor chamber is adjusted to a range of about 20 to about 45 MPa; or the source comprising the target metal, the chelating agent and the solvent are allowed to react in the reactor chamber for a residence time in a range of about 0.01 to about 2 hours; or the source comprising the target metal and the chelating agent are added in a source-to-chelating agent ratio in the range of about 0.01 to about 2; or the method comprises providing mechanical agitation to the reactor chamber and the source comprising the target metal, the chelating agent and the solvent are subjected to an agitation rate in a range of about 750 to about 2500 rpm; or the chelating agent comprises HNO.sub.3 in a concentration of about 0.01 to about 21.4 M; or the method further comprises providing a co-solvent and adding the co-solvent to the reactor chamber in an amount of about 0.01 to about 5 mol %; or the chelating agent is selected from the group consisting of crown ethers, tributyl phosphate (TBP), bis(2-ethylhexyl) phosphate (DEHPA), mono-(2-ethylhexyl)-2-ethylhexyl-phosphate (HEHEHP), bis(2,4,4-trimethylpentyl)phosphinic acid, bis(2,4,4-trimethylpentyl)dithiophosphinic acid, bis(2,4,4-trimethylpentyl)octylphosphine oxide, neodecanoic acid and 16,16-dimethylheptadecan-1-amine.
85-90. (canceled)
91. The method of claim 84, wherein the co-solvent is selected from the group consisting of methanol, anhydrous acetonitrile (ACN), diethyl carbonate (DEC) and propylene carbonate (PC).
92. The method of claim 83, wherein the method comprises a first extraction phase to extract organic components from the lithium ion battery and a second extraction phase to extract the target metal.
93. The method of claim 92, wherein the first extraction phase and the second extraction phase take place under different reaction conditions.
94. (canceled)
95. The method of claim 1, wherein the source is activated carbon and the target metal is gold.
96. The method of claim 95, wherein the activated carbon comprises Au(CN).sub.2-complex.
97. The method of claim 95, wherein: the temperature in the reactor chamber is adjusted to a range of about 40 to about 100° C.; or the pressure in the reactor chamber is adjusted to a range of about 10 to about 60 MPa; or the source comprising the target metal, the chelating agent and the solvent are allowed to react in the reactor chamber for a residence time in a range of about 0.01 to about 1 hour; or the source comprising the target metal and the chelating agent are added in a source-to-chelating agent ratio in the range of about 0.01 to about 1; or the method comprises providing mechanical agitation to the reactor chamber and the source comprising the target metal, the chelating agent and the solvent are subjected to an agitation rate in a range of about 750 to about 1500 rpm; or the chelating agent comprises HNO.sub.3 in a concentration of about 0.01 to about 15.7 M; or the method further comprises providing methanol and adding the methanol to the reactor chamber in an amount of about 0.01 to about 5 mol %.
98-103. (canceled)
104. A system for carrying out the method for supercritical fluid extraction of metal from a source as defined in claim 1, the system comprising: a reactor chamber; optionally, a mechanical agitator; a source comprising a target metal; a chelating agent; and a solvent.
105. The method of claim 2, wherein: the organophosphorus compound is selected from the group consisting of tributyl phosphate (TBP), tributyl phosphate-nitric acid (TBP-HNO.sub.3), trialkylphosphine oxide-nitric acid (TRPO-HNO.sub.3), tributylphosphine oxide (TBPO), trioctylphosphine oxide (TOPO), triphenylphosphine oxide (TPPO), bis(2-ethylhexyl) phosphate (DEHPA), bis(2-ethylhexyl)monothiophosphoric acid (D2EHTPA), dialkyl phosphinic acid (Cyanex 272), bis(2,4,4-trimethylpentyl)dithiophosphinic acid (Cyanex 301, Cyanex 302), bis-(2-ethylhexyl)phosphoric acid (B2EHPA), carbamoylmethylene phosphine oxide (CMPO), 2-ethylhexyl phosphonic acid mono-2-ethylhexyl ester (PC88A), phosphonoacetic acid (PAA) and N,N-bisphosphono(methyl)glycine (BPG); or the organophosphorus compound is tributyl phosphate-nitric acid (TBP-HNO.sub.3); or the ketone is selected from the group consisting of acetylacetone (AA), trifluoroacetylacetone (TFA), hexafluoroacetylacetone (HFA), trifluoroacetylacetone (TAA), thenoyltrifluoroacetone (TTA), methyl isobutyl ketone (MIBK), 2,2,7-trimethyl-3,5-octanedione (TOD), 2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-3,5-heptanedione (THD), 1,1-dimethyl-3,5-hexanedione (DMHD), 2,6-dimethyl-3,5-heptanedione (DIBM), 1,1,1-trifluoro-4-phenyl-2,5-butanedione (TFBZM) and 1-phenyl-1,3-pentanedione (BZAC); or the dithiocarbamate is selected from the group consisting of lithium bis(trifluoroethyl)dithiocarbamate (LiFDDC), diethyldithiocarbamate (DDC), bis(trifluoroethyl)dithiocarbamate (FDDC), dipropyldithiocarbamate (P3DC), dibutyldithiocarbamate (BDC), dipentyldithiocarbamate (P5DC), dihexyldithiocarbamate (HDC), pyrrolidinedithiocarbamate (PDC) and tetrabutylammonium dibutyldithiocarbamate TBA(BDC); or the crown ether is selected from the group consisting of 2,2-dicyclohexyl-1,4,7,10,13,16,19-heptaoxacyclohenicosane (DCH21C7), 2,3,11,12-dicyclohexano-1,4,7,10,13,16-hexaoxacyclooctadecane (DCH18C6), 1,4,7,10,13-pentaoxacyclopentadecane (15C5), bistriazolo-crown ether I (Crown I), bistriazolo-crown ether II (Crown II) and bistriazolo-crown ether III (Crown III);or the ethylene oxide diphosphate derivative is selected from the group consisting of glycol dioctyl dimethyl diphosphate (EG2Oct), ethylene glycol bis(2-isopropoxyethyl) dimethyl diphosphate (EG2IPE), triethylene glycol bis(2-isopropoxyethyl) dimethyl diphosphate (EG3IPE) and tetraethylene glycol bis(2-isopropoxyethyl) dimethyl diphosphate (EG4IPE); or the fluorinated compound is selected from the group consisting of 1,1,1,2,2,3,3-heptafluoro-7,7-dimethyl-4,6-oactanedione (HFOD), 1,1,1,5,5,5-hexafluoro-2,4-pentanedione (HFAC), thenoyltrifluoroacetone (TTFA), pentadecafluorooactanoic acid (HPFOA), ammonium perfluoropolyether piperazindithiocarbamate (FE-APDC), perfluoropolyether picolylamine (FE-PA), ammonium perfluoropolyether dithiocarbamate (FE-DC), perfluoropolyether dithiol (FE-DT) and heptafluorobutanoylpivaroylmethane (FOD); or the 8-hydroxyquinoline or a derivative thereof is selected from the group consisting of 7-(1-vinyl-3,3,5,5-tetramethylhexyl)-8-hydroxyquinoline and 8-hydroxyquinoline; or the aminopolycarboxylic acid is selected from the group consisting of diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid (DTPA), diethylenetriaminepentaacetic dianhydride (DTPA-DA) and triethylenetetraaminehexaacetic acid (H6TTHA); or the amide is selected from the group consisting of N,N,N′,N′-tetraoctyldiglycolamide (TODGA), N,N,N′,N′-tetraisobutyl-3-oxapentanediamide (TiBODA), N,N,N′,N′-tetrabutyl-3-oxapentanediamide (TBODA) and N,N′-dimethyl-N,N′-dibutyltetradecylmalonamide (DMDBTDMADBBP); or the organic acid is neodecanoic acid; or the quaternary ammonium salt is N-methyl-N,N,N-trioctylammonium chloride; or the oxime is 2-hydroxy-5-nonylbenzophenone oxime.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0063] Supercritical Fluid Extraction Process
[0064]
[0065]
[0066] 1—Solvent/chelating agent
[0067] 2—Solvent pump (transfers co-solvent or chelating agent into the extraction chamber and controls the flow rate of co-solvent or chelating agent into the system)
[0068] 3—Solvent valve (on/off control for co-solvent or chelating agent flow)
[0069] 4—Pressure indicator and Rupture Disc (measures pressure inside the reactor and provides overpressure protection for the system)
[0070] 5—Liquid CO.sub.2
[0071] 6—CO.sub.2 shut off valve (on/off control for liquid CO.sub.2 flow)
[0072] 7—Supercritical CO.sub.2 pump (transfers liquid CO.sub.2 into the extraction chamber, while pressurizing to ensure supercritical conditions within the chamber. Measures the pressure inside the reactor. Controls flow rate of liquid CO.sub.2 to the chamber, providing an on/off control for liquid CO.sub.2 flow, and provides cooling to ensure CO.sub.2 stays in the liquid phase during pumping)
[0073] 8—CO.sub.2 valve (optional, on/off control for liquid CO.sub.2 flow)
[0074] 9—Reaction chamber (contains sample, supercritical fluid, chelating agent and/or co-solvent during the extraction process)
[0075] 10—Heating jacket (provides heating to the extraction chamber to maintain temperature control during the extraction process)
[0076] 11—Motor (drives the magnetic agitator)
[0077] 12—Magnetic agitator (provides mixing and mechanical forces within the extraction chamber during the extraction process)
[0078] 13—Inside thermocouple (measures temperature within the extraction chamber)
[0079] 14—Reactor controller (controls the temperature both inside and on the surface of the extraction chamber, controls the agitation rate, and provides power to heating jacket and motor)
[0080] 15—Skin thermocouple (measures surface/skin temperature on the outside of the extraction chamber)
[0081] 16—Static/dynamic valve (on/off control for gasified CO.sub.2, chelated agent flow and/or co-solvent flow exiting the extraction chamber)
[0082] 17—Restrictor valve (controls the flow rate of gasified CO.sub.2, chelated agent flow and/or co-solvent flow exiting the extraction chamber)
[0083] 18—Valve heater (provides heating to both static/dynamic valve and restrictor valve)
[0084] 19—EPA vial (vessel for the collection and containment of chelated agent and/or co-solvent. Provides connection from the outlet of restrictor valve to the vent line)
[0085] 20—Vent line (line for venting gasified CO.sub.2 and residue chemicals in the gasified CO.sub.2)
[0086] A known amount of sample along with chelating agent 1 is loaded into the reactor chamber 9. After closing the reactor chamber 9, liquid CO.sub.2 5 is pumped into the system with both restrictor valve 17 and static/dynamic valve 16 closed until the desired pressure is reached. Heating is provided by and maintained through the electric heating jacket 10 surrounding the reactor chamber 9 until the desired temperature is reached. Soluble rare earth complex formed during the reaction is collected in the EPA vial 19 by opening both restrictor valve 17 and static/dynamic valve 16 upon reaching the designated extraction time.
Preferred Embodiment 1: Extraction of Rare Earth Elements from Hybrid Electric Vehicle Batteries
[0087] The present invention relates to the development of an efficient and sustainable process for the urban mining of rare earth elements from waste electrical and electronic equipment, such as nickel metal hydride batteries. In one preferred embodiment, the developed process relies on supercritical fluid extraction utilizing CO.sub.2 as the solvent, which is inert, safe, and abundant. This process is efficient in a sense that it is safe, runs at low temperature, and does not produce hazardous waste, while recovering preferably up to about 90% of rare earth elements.
[0088] Furthermore, the present invention provides a mechanism for the supercritical fluid extraction of rare earth elements, where are considered a trivalent rare earth element state bonded with three tri-n-butyl phosphate (TBP) molecules and three nitrates model for the extracted rare earth tri-n-butyl phosphate complex. The supercritical fluid extraction process has the advantage of waste valorization without utilizing hazardous reagents, minimizing the negative impacts of process tailings.
[0089] Unlike previous studies which have focused on pure REE oxides or their mixture, the present invention provides a process for the SCFE of REEs from postconsumer commercial products, such as real anode material of a HEV battery. In one preferred aspect, there is provided an innovative process on the basis of SCFE (sc-CO.sub.2) to extract REEs from the anode materials of an end-of-life NiMH from a HEV. To systematically enhance the extraction process, two different TBP(HNO.sub.3)×(H.sub.2O).sub.y chelating agents were synthesized and tested under various operating conditions in terms of temperature, pressure, solid to chelating agent ratio (S:CA), residence time, and agitation rate, with and without co-solvent (methanol) addition, to determine optimal operating conditions. The present invention can provide environmentally sustainable urban mining of REEs from WEEE, such as NiMH batteries.
Experimental Section for Preferred Embodiment 1
[0090] Chemicals and materials. Tri-n-butyl phosphate (TBP, ≤100%), concentrated nitric acid (15.7 M, 70 w/w %), concentrated sodium hydroxide (19.4, 50 w/w %), phenolphthalein (solution 1% in alcohol), and lanthanum oxide (La.sub.2O.sub.3, 99.99%) were purchased from VWR™. Cerium oxide (CeO.sub.2, 99.9%), praseodymium oxide (Pr.sub.6O.sub.11, 99.9%), and neodymium oxide (Nd.sub.2O.sub.3, 99.9%) were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich™. Carbon dioxide (CO.sub.2, grade 5.0) to be used as solvent was purchased from Linde Canada™, and methanol (CH.sub.3OH, HPLC, 99.9%) to be used as optional co-solvent was purchased from Fisher Chemical™. The battery (2012 Toyota Prius™ model C) was utilized as the feed. Anode samples to be used as source were retrieved from the battery by removing the casing and sawing into the individual modules.
[0091] Preparation of TBP-HNO.sub.3 complex. TBP-HNO.sub.3 complexes to be used as chelating agents were prepared by vigorously mixing TBP with two different concentrations of HNO.sub.3 (10.4 M, 50 w/w % and 15.7 M, 70 w/w %) for 5 min in a separatory funnel followed by gravity separation for 5 min. The upper organic phase was the TBP-HNO.sub.3 complex. The concentration of HNO.sub.3 in the TBP-HNO.sub.3 complex was determined by acid-base titration with 0.1 M NaOH. The water content was measured by Karl Fischer titration using a C20 instrument (Mettler Toledo International Inc.). The density of the TBP-HNO.sub.3 complex was calculated by weighing a known sample volume in triplicate runs with a TLE303E balance (Mettler Toledo International Inc.). Combining density, water content, and acid concentration data, the TBP-HNO.sub.3 complex was fully characterized.
[0092] Experimental design. The process flow diagram for SCFE used in this experiment is presented in
[0093] SCFE process. A known amount of anode material or synthetic anode along with TBP-HNO.sub.3 was loaded into the reactor chamber 9. After closing the reactor head, liquid CO.sub.2 was pumped into the system with both restrictor valve 17 and static/dynamic valve 16 closed until the desired pressure was reached. Heating was provided by and maintained through the electric heating jacket 10 surrounding the reactor chamber 9 until the desired temperature was reached. Soluble rare earth complex formed during the reaction was collected in the EPA vial 19 by opening both restrictor valve 17 and static/dynamic valve 16 upon reaching the designated extraction time. Reproducibility tests (three independent experiments) showed that the experimentally measured data are accurate to within ±5%.
[0094] In the experiments where methanol was added as co-solvent, the amount was calculated on the basis of total number of moles of CO.sub.2 in the reactor 9. Considering methanol has a higher critical temperature compared with liquid CO.sub.2 (240° C. vs. 31.1° C.), 2 mol % concentration was chosen. The formula to calculate volume of methanol is as follows:
[0095] The density of supercritical CO.sub.2 was obtained from National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) database: 871.22 kg/m.sup.3 at 35° C. and 20.7 MPa, and 934.19 kg/m.sup.3 at 35° C. and 31.0 MPa.
[0096] Characterization of the Test Specimen
[0097] Aqua Regia Digestion and ICP-OES Characterization
[0098] To determine the concentration of REEs in the unprocessed and extracted samples, aqua regia digestion was performed at 200° C., using an Ethos EZ Microwave Digestion System™, followed by inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectroscopy (ICP-OES) (PerkinElmer Optima 8000™) Four independent experiments were conducted to determine the average concentration of REEs in the unprocessed samples. Three independent dilutions were conducted to determine the average concentration of REEs in the extracted samples.
[0099] The extraction efficiency (E) is defined as follows:
[0100] Morphological, mineralogical and particle size analysis. Morphological characterization of the unprocessed and extracted samples was performed using scanning electron microscopy energy dispersive spectroscopy (SEM-EDS, Hitachi SU8230™). The mineralogical characterization of the sample was performed using X-ray diffraction (XRD, Philips PW1830™). The particle size of the anode sample was determined using a laser particle size analyzer (Horiba Partica LA-950™).
[0101] Results and Discussion
[0102] Characterization of the anode material. The chemical composition of the anode material was characterized by ICP-OES after aqua regia digestion of the samples. Four REEs were identified: lanthanum (La), cerium (Ce), praseodymium (Pr), and neodymium (Nd). The total REE weight percent in the sample was approximately 30 wt % (
[0103] Characterization of TBP-HNO.sub.3 complexes. Two TBP-HNO.sub.3 complexes were characterized using the method described in the experimental section. The one with 70% w/w nitric acid was identified to be TBP(HNO.sub.3).sub.1.745(H.sub.2O).sub.0.52.
[0104] Establishing baseline operating conditions. Main parameters that could affect the extraction efficiency include but are not limited to temperature, pressure, residence time, agitation rate, sample to chelating agent ratio (S:CA), type of the chelating agent and presence of co-solvent (methanol). The baseline conditions were established at temperature of 35° C., pressure of 20.7 MPa, residence time of 1 h, agitation rate of 750 rpm, S:CA of 1:5 (w/v, 1 g to 5 mL), with TBP(HNO.sub.3).sub.1.171(H.sub.2O).sub.0.384 chelating agent and no co-solvent added.
[0105] Determining Optimum Operating Conditions.
[0106] To determine the optimum operating conditions that yield maximum REE extraction efficiency in this preferred embodiment, a systematic investigation was performed. First, using the baseline conditions, we obtained 49% La, 45% Ce, 58% Pr, and 45%, Nd extraction efficiency, as presented in Table 1 (run 1). Second, the effect of each individual process parameter on the REE extraction efficiency was investigated by only changing that single parameter compared with the baseline conditions (Table 1, run 2-7 and 9), where in run 9, 2 mol % methanol was added as a co-solvent to enhance the extraction process. On the basis of the extraction results in Table 1, increasing all the parameters had a positive effect on the extraction efficiency with the exception of S:CA ratio with negligible effect (run 3) and temperature with negative effect (run 2). Third, all individual parameters with positive effects on REE extraction were combined to examine the extraction efficiency for an overall enhanced extraction process with and without methanol addition (2 mol %) (Table 1, run 8 and 10). The overall enhanced run with 2 mol % methanol addition resulted in the highest extraction efficiency (La: 79%, Ce: 77%, Pr: 83%, Nd: 69%) (Table 1, run 10). Fourth, to prevent oversaturating the system and further enhancing the extraction efficiency of all REEs, we decreased the anode sample size of the overall enhanced run by half (from 1 g to 0.5 g), which was identified as the optimized run (Table 1, run 11). Lastly, a mixture of pure rare earth oxides (REOs) were processed under the optimized conditions with and without 2 mol % methanol addition to assess the efficacy of the developed SCFE process for a synthetic anode material (Table 1, run 12 and 13).
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 An overview of the experimental runs with corresponding processing parameters and extraction efficiencies for La, Ce, Pr, and Nd Extraction Temper- Agitation Efficiency ature Pressure Time S:CA Rate Chelating Methanol for La, Ce, Run # Run Name (° C.) (MPa) (h) (g:mL) (rpm) agent Addition Pr, Nd (%) 1 Baseline 35 20.7 1 1:5 750 TBP(HNO.sub.3).sub.1.171 No 49, 45, 58, 45 (H2O).sub.0.384 2 Temperature 55 20.7 1 1:5 750 TBP(HNO.sub.3).sub.1.171 No 48, 45, 56, 45 increase (H2O).sub.0.384 3 S:CA 35 20.7 1 1:10 750 TBP(HNO.sub.3).sub.1.171 No 51, 48, 61, 48 increase (H2O).sub.0.384 4 Agitation 35 20.7 1 1:5 1500 TBP(HNO.sub.3).sub.1.171 No 52, 49, 62, 49 increase (H2O).sub.0.384 5 Residence 35 20.7 2 1:5 750 TBP(HNO.sub.3).sub.1.171 No 53, 50, 62, 49 time increase (H2O).sub.0.384 6 Pressure 35 31.0 1 1:5 750 TBP(HNO.sub.3).sub.1.171 No 53, 50, 63, 50 increase (H2O).sub.0.384 7 Stock acid 35 20.7 1 1:5 750 TBP(HNO.sub.3).sub.1.745 No 58, 57, 68, 58 complex (H2O).sub.0.52 8 Overall 35 31.0 2 1:5 1500 TBP(HNO.sub.3).sub.1.745 No 56, 54, 65, 55 enhanced (H2O).sub.0.52 9 Baseline 35 20.7 1 1:5 750 TBP(HNO.sub.3).sub.1.171 Yes 67, 65, 73, 64 methanol (H2O).sub.0.384 10 Overall 35 31.0 2 1:5 1500 TBP(HNO.sub.3).sub.1.745 Yes 79, 77, 83, 69 enhanced (H2O).sub.0.52 methanol 11 Optimized 35 31.0 2 1:10 1500 TBP(HNO.sub.3).sub.1.745 Yes 86, 86, 88, 90 (H2O).sub.0.52 12 Synthetic 35 31.0 2 1:10 1500 TBP(HNO.sub.3).sub.1.745 No 30, 73, 61, 73 anode (H2O).sub.0.52 13 Synthetic 35 31.0 2 1:10 1500 TBP(HNO.sub.3).sub.1.745 Yes 86, 61, 78, 90 anode (H2O).sub.0.52 methanol
[0107] Effect of process parameter on REE extraction efficiency. The effect of increasing each operating parameter on REE extraction efficiency was investigated with respect to the baseline conditions. As can be seen in
[0108] where, S (g/L) is the solubility of a solute in supercritical fluid; ρ (g/L) is the density of the supercritical fluid; k is the association number that describes the number of solvent molecules associated with the complex; T is the temperature in K; A and B are empirical parameters.
[0109] Because increasing temperature at constant pressure decreases the density ρ and A/T term in Eq. 1, it decreases the solubility of the solute, thus decreasing the extraction efficiency.
[0110] On the contrary, increasing pressure at constant temperature increases the density as more CO.sub.2 is pumped into the system, thus it increases the solubility, and therefore, the extraction efficiency. Furthermore, increasing pressure improves the penetration of sc-CO.sub.2 into deeper pores of the anode material, which ultimately resulted in higher degree of complexation.
[0111] Increasing the residence time from 1 h to 2 h increased the leaching efficiency (
[0112] Increasing the agitation rate increased the leaching efficiency because it increased the turbulency of the system and the surface contact between the chelating agent and the sample (
[0113] A chelating agent with higher acid content, i.e., TBP(HNO.sub.3).sub.1.745(H.sub.2O).sub.0.52, compared with TBP(HNO.sub.3).sub.1.171(H.sub.2O).sub.0.384, resulted in higher extraction efficiency, because it improved the formation of REE-TBP nitrate complex, as more HNO.sub.3 was available (
[0114] The amount of the chelating agent that is dissolvable in sc-CO.sub.2 is capped under certain conditions, and once this limit is reached, a further increase in volume of the chelating agent does not improve the REE extraction efficiency, as demonstrated by run 3 in
[0115] The effect of adding a co-solvent on the extraction efficiency was investigated. 2 mol % methanol was chosen as the co-solvent and observed an increase in the extraction efficiency (
[0116] Comparison between REE extraction from synthetic and actual NiMH anode material. Also investigated was the extraction efficiency of REEs from a synthetic mixture of oxides of cerium, lanthanum, neodymium, and praseodymium, in the same ratio as that in the actual anode material (0.5 g sample size). To calculate the extraction efficiency, REE wt % in unprocessed synthetic anode was determined to be 51.3% La, 15.3% Ce, 9.5% Pr, and 5.9% Nd. The normalized REE wt % in the synthetic anode material were 62.6% La, 18.6% Ce, 11.6% Pr, and 7.2% Nd, which are very close to those in the actual anode material (60.4% La, 24.5% Ce, 8.1% Pr, and 7.0% Nd). Two separate experimental runs were performed: one without and one with 2 mol % methanol addition (
[0117] Characterization of anode material before and after SCFE. Elemental mapping identifies large amounts of REEs on the surface of the anode material (
[0118] Exploring the mechanism of REE extraction using sc-CO.sub.2. We propose a possible molecular mechanism for the recovery of REEs from spent NiMH battery anode material using TBP-HNO.sub.3 as an extracting agent in sc-CO.sub.2. Based on our proposed mechanism, bidentate nitrate anions from the TBP-HNO.sub.3 extractant chelate to the Ln.sup.3+ cation, forming neutral lanthanide nitrates Ln(NO.sub.3).sub.3. Hydrophobic effects from aliphatic tails and dipole-dipole interactions between phosphate head-groups of TBP molecules promote the formation of reverse micelles, whereby, upon contact with the sample matrix, hydrophilic solutes, such as lanthanide salts, assimilate into their polar cores. Such coordination sites comply with the lanthanide metal geometry, and as a result, the cation is centered in a 9 O coordinate environment comprised of 3 bidentate nitrate anions and 3 TBP molecules (
Ln.sub.2O.sub.3+6HNO.sub.3.fwdarw.2Ln.sup.3++6NO.sub.3−+3H.sub.2O (4)
Ln.sup.3++3NO.sub.3−+n TBP.fwdarw.Ln(NO.sub.3).sub.3(TBP).sub.n (5)
[0119] The following step involves the synergy between the reverse micelles that, upon incorporation of lanthanide ions and/or other hydrophilic species, attract and adhere to one another via hydrophobic interactions of aliphatic functionalities, as depicted in
Conclusions from Preferred Embodiment 1
[0120] Preferred Embodiment 1 provides an environmental friendly SCFE process to extract REEs from postconsumer NiMH batteries. The effect of several operating parameters, including temperature, pressure, residence time, sample to chelating agent ratio, agitation rate, complex chemistry, and co-solvent (methanol) addition, on the REE extraction efficiency was investigated, and 35° C., 31 MPa, 2 h residence time, S:CA ratio of 1:10, TBP(HNO.sub.3).sub.1.745(H.sub.2O).sub.0.52 chelating agent with 2 mol % methanol addition were determined to be some of the preferred conditions for this embodiment, resulting in 86% La, 86% Ce, 88% Pr, and 90% Nd recovery.
[0121] Potential options to further increase the extraction efficiency include increasing pressure and/or residence time, decreasing S:CA ratio, and increasing methanol concentration. Furthermore, a synthetic anode material was prepared and processed utilizing pure REOs, which resulted in similar or lower REE extraction efficiency compared with the actual anode material, confirming the robustness of the developed process for the actual anode material. From an industrial point of view, SCFE mainly requires a high-pressure reactor for extraction and a depressurization tank for the separation of the products from recyclable CO.sub.2. Because this process requires low content of chelating agent, it generates minimal hazardous waste. Furthermore, energy consumption of this process is significantly lower than that of a typical pyrometallurgical process.
[0122] With respect to Preferred Embodiment 1, the following conditions may preferably apply: [0123] the temperature in the reactor chamber is adjusted to a range of about 35 to 55° C.; [0124] the pressure in the reactor chamber is adjusted to a range of about 20.7 to 31 MPa; [0125] the source comprising the target metal, the chelating agent and the solvent are allowed to react in the reactor chamber for a residence time in a range of about 1 to 2 hours; [0126] the source-to-chelating agent ratio is in a range of about 0.1 to 0.2; [0127] the source comprising the target metal, the chelating agent and the solvent are subjected to an agitation rate in a range of about 750 to 1500 rpm; [0128] the chelating agent comprises HNO.sub.3 in a concentration of about 10.4 to 15.7 M; and [0129] adding the methanol to the reactor chamber in an amount of about 0.01 to 2 mol %.
[0130] Furthermore, the following conditions may be more preferable: [0131] the temperature in the reactor chamber is adjusted to about 35° C.; [0132] the pressure in the reactor chamber is adjusted to about 31 MPa; [0133] the residence time is about 2 hours; [0134] the source-to-chelating agent ratio is about 0.1; [0135] the agitation rate is about 1500 rpm; [0136] the chelating agent comprises HNO.sub.3 in a concentration of about 15.7 M; and [0137] adding the methanol to the reactor chamber in an amount of about 2 mol %.
Preferred Embodiment 2: Extraction of Rare Earth Elements from Permanent Magnets
[0138] As mentioned above, the present invention relates to the development of an efficient and sustainable process for the urban mining of REEs from WEEE. In addition to NiMH batteries, another potential source of REEs are permanent magnets, which can be found in, for example, computer hard disk drives and wind turbines. As such, another preferred embodiment of the present invention relates to supercritical fluid extraction of metals, such as rare earth elements, from permanent magnets.
Experimental Section for Preferred Embodiment 2
[0139] Chemicals and materials. The following reagents were employed: Tri-n-butyl phosphate (TBP, 98%—from VWRTM), concentrated nitric acid (15.7 M, 70 wt %—VWR™), concentrated hydrochloric acid (12.2 M, 37 wt %—VWR™), concentrated sodium hydroxide (19.4 M, 50 wt %—VWR™), phenolphthalein indicator solution (1% in alcohol—VWR™), neodymium oxide (Nd.sub.2O.sub.3, 99.9 wt %—Sigma Aldrich™), iron (III) oxide (Fe.sub.2O.sub.3, 99 wt %—Sigma Aldrich™), Iron (II) oxide (FeO, 99.5 wt %—Alfa Aesar™), neodymium (III) nitrate hexahydrate (Nd(NO.sub.3).sub.3.6H.sub.2O 99.9 wt %—Alfa Aesar™), carbon dioxide (CO.sub.2, grade 4.0—Linde Canada™), methanol (CH.sub.3OH, HPLC, 99.9 wt %—Fisher Chemical™), hexanes (ACS grade—Fisher Chemical™), and acetone (Reagent grade—Caledon Laboratory Chemicals™).
[0140] Magnet Preparation. The grade N52 NdFeB magnet was purchased from CMS magnetics™. The magnet was heated to 350° C. for one hour in a box furnace (CARBOLITE® HTF18/4) for demagnetization The Nickel-Copper-Nickel triple coating layer on the magnet was then removed with a Dremel 4000™ rotary tool. The demagnetized uncoated magnet was crushed and ground into fine particles using a roller mill. The particle size of the magnet particles was determined to be Median Size=17.7 μm, Mean Size=21.6 μm, D10=11.1 μm, D90=33.8 using a laser particle size analyzer (Horiba Partica LA-950™) (See
[0141] Preparation of TBP-HNO.sub.3 complexes. TBP-HNO.sub.3 chelating agent complexes were synthesized by mixing TBP and HNO.sub.3 solutions at either 10.4 M (50 wt %), 13.05 M (60 wt %), or 15.7 M (70 wt %)—corresponding to the three levels of test factor X.sub.6 in the experimental design. The mixture was agitated manually in a separatory funnel for 5 min, then allowed to settle. The immiscible liquid phases were separated, with the upper organic phase corresponding to the TBP-HNO.sub.3 chelating agent. The nitric acid content of the complex was determined by acid-base titration with 0.1 M NaOH solution and phenolphthalein indicator (n=3). The water content was determined by Karl Fischer titration (n=3) with a C20 Coulometer™ (Mettler Toledo™). Chelating agent density was determined directly by measuring the weight of a known volume of chelating agent sample. Combining the above data, the stoichiometry of the chelating agents was determined as the following: (X.sub.6=−1: TBP(H20).sub.0.387(HNO.sub.3).sub.1.224, X.sub.6=0: TBP(H.sub.2O).sub.0.405(HNO.sub.3)1.352; X.sub.6=+1: TBP(H.sub.2O).sub.0.560(HNO.sub.3).sub.1.969). At the studied temperatures (35 to 55° C. for a maximum of two hours), the TBP-HNO.sub.3 complex was expected to be stable. However, careful safety precautions must be taken while handling this system because in a pressure vessel, there is a risk of exothermic reactions between TBP and HNO.sub.3. Depending on the pressure, acid concentration and residence time, the onset temperature for exothermic self-accelerating oxidation processes in TBP-HNO.sub.3 mixtures is 117° C. and potentially lower depending if alcohols are present, which could result in hazardous reactions under certain reaction conditions. As such, particular care and caution must be taken to ensure that experiments are carried out within safe operating parameters.
[0142] Design of Experiment. The experimental parameter settings for these SCFE trials were constructed using Fractional Factorial Experimental Design methodology, with the goal of testing a large number of process parameters and developing an empirical model that describes the effect of each operating parameter on the extraction REEs in the system. The following operating parameters were investigated: temperature (X.sub.1), pressure (X.sub.2), residence time (duration) (X.sub.3), the sample:chelating agent (S:CA) ratio (X.sub.4) (g/mL), agitation rate (X.sub.5), HNO.sub.3 concentration in the chelating agent (X.sub.6), and cosolvent additions (methanol in this case) (X.sub.7). The test levels were selected on the basis of the levels used in a study by the inventors on the sc-CO.sub.2 extraction of REEs from NiMH batteries. The same levels were used for both studies to allow direct comparison between the two systems. The parameter settings (x.sub.i) were normalized and coded between −1 (low level) and +1 (high level), as the parameter coding allows for direct comparison of the relative impact of each parameter on the system response by direct comparison of the magnitude of the model coefficients. A summary of the levels associated to each of the test parameters is given in Table 2.
TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 List of coded factor effects and their corresponding levels. Factor Units −1 Level 0 Level +1 Level X.sub.1: Temperature ° C. 35 45 55 X.sub.2: Pressure MPa 20.7 25.85 31 X.sub.3: Duration h 1 1.5 2 X.sub.4: S:CA ratio g/ml 0.20 0.15 0.10 X.sub.5: Agitation rate rpm 750 1125 1500 X.sub.6: Chelating agent M 10.4 13.05 15.7 X.sub.7: Methanol addition % 0 1 2
[0143] Empirical model building and statistical methods. The results of the extraction experiments were utilized to build a set of empirical models to describe the extraction ({circumflex over (γ)}.sub.i) of the tested elements as a function of the seven experimental parameters (X.sub.1 to X.sub.7) (Equations (1-2))
ŷ.sub.iβ.sub.0+β.sub.1X.sub.1+β.sub.2X.sub.2+β.sub.3X.sub.3+β.sub.4X.sub.4+β.sub.5X.sub.5+β.sub.6X.sub.6+β.sub.7X.sub.7+{tilde over (β)}.sub.24X.sub.2X.sub.4+{tilde over (β)}.sub.14X.sub.1X.sub.4+{tilde over (β)}.sub.15X.sub.1X.sub.5+{tilde over (β)}.sub.12X.sub.1X.sub.2+{tilde over (β)}.sub.13X.sub.1X.sub.3+{tilde over (β)}.sub.17X.sub.1X.sub.7+{tilde over (β)}.sub.16X.sub.1X.sub.6 (1)
[0144] Where: (assuming 3rd order and higher interactions are negligible)
{tilde over (β)}.sub.24=β.sub.24+β.sub.35+β.sub.67 {tilde over (β)}.sub.14=β.sub.14+β.sub.36+β.sub.57 {tilde over (β)}.sub.15=β.sub.15+β.sub.26+β.sub.47 {tilde over (β)}.sub.12=β.sub.12+β.sub.37+β.sub.56 {tilde over (β)}.sub.13=β.sub.13+β.sub.27+β.sub.46 {tilde over (β)}.sub.17=β.sub.17+β.sub.23+β.sub.45 {tilde over (β)}.sub.16=β.sub.16+β.sub.25+β.sub.34 (2)
[0145] The experimental data was fit to this empirical model multiple Linear Least Squares Regression (mLLSR) according to Equation (3). {circumflex over (β)} is the model parameter vector, containing each of the model parameters ({circumflex over (β)}.sub.0, {circumflex over (β)}.sub.1, {circumflex over (β)}.sub.2, . . . ), X is the experimental design matrix (See Table 3), and Y.sub.i is the response vector, containing each of the measured experimental extraction efficiencies.
{circumflex over (β)}=(X.sup.T X).sup.−1(X.sup.T Y.sub.i) (3)
TABLE-US-00003 TABLE 3 Coded calculation matrix (X) used for empirical model building. The factors in the 1.sup.st row are the design factors, and those in the 2.sup.nd and 3.sup.rd rows are the aliased factors (3.sup.rd order and above interactions were assumed to be negligible). X.sub.2X.sub.4 X.sub.1X.sub.4 X.sub.1X.sub.5 X.sub.1X.sub.2 X.sub.1X.sub.3 X.sub.1X.sub.7 X.sub.1X.sub.6 Run X.sub.3X.sub.5 X.sub.3X.sub.6 X.sub.2X.sub.6 X.sub.3X.sub.7 X.sub.2X.sub.7 X.sub.2X.sub.3 X.sub.2X.sub.5 ID X.sub.0 X.sub.1 X.sub.2 X.sub.3 X.sub.4 X.sub.5 X.sub.6 X.sub.7 X.sub.6X.sub.7 X.sub.5X.sub.7 X.sub.4X.sub.7 X.sub.5X.sub.6 χ.sub.4χ.sub.6 X.sub.4X.sub.5 X.sub.3X.sub.4 1 1 −1 −1 −1 1 1 1 −1 −1 −1 −1 1 1 1 −1 2 1 1 −1 −1 −1 −1 1 1 1 −1 −1 −1 −1 1 1 3 1 −1 1 −1 −1 1 −1 1 −1 1 −1 −1 1 −1 1 4 1 1 1 −1 1 −1 −1 −1 1 1 −1 1 −1 −1 −1 5 1 −1 −1 1 1 −1 −1 1 −1 −1 1 1 −1 −1 1 6 1 1 −1 1 −1 1 −1 −1 1 −1 1 −1 1 −1 −1 7 1 −1 1 1 −1 −1 1 −1 −1 1 1 −1 −1 1 −1 8 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 9 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 11 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 12 1 1 1 1 −1 −1 −1 1 −1 −1 −1 1 1 1 −1 13 1 −1 1 1 1 1 −1 −1 1 −1 −1 −1 −1 1 1 14 1 1 −1 1 1 −1 1 −1 −1 1 −1 −1 1 −1 1 15 1 −1 −1 1 −1 1 1 1 1 1 −1 1 −1 −1 −1 16 1 1 1 −1 −1 1 1 −1 −1 −1 1 1 −1 −1 1 17 1 −1 1 −1 1 −1 1 1 1 −1 1 −1 1 −1 −1 18 1 1 −1 −1 1 1 −1 1 −1 1 1 −1 −1 1 −1 19 1 −1 −1 −1 −1 −1 −1 −1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
[0146] SCFE process. Extraction experiments were carried out in a 100 mL high-pressure reactor system manufactured by Supercritical Fluid Technology Inc., USA™. Magnet material or synthetic oxide, along with TBP-HNO.sub.3 was loaded into the reactor chamber prior to CO.sub.2 injection, and increasing pressure and temperature to supercritical conditions. For all tests, the volume of chelating agent was fixed at 5 mL (for example, for a test with a S:CA of 0.2 g/mL, 1 g of magnet powder was utilized). After completion of reaction, rare earth complex formed during the reaction was separated by depressurizing and collecting the liquid chelating agent. In the experiments with methanol co-solvent addition, the amount was determined on a mass/mass basis, considering total number of moles of CO.sub.2 in the reactor (Equation (4)). The density of supercritical CO.sub.2 was obtained from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST).
[0147] Characterization of the Test Specimens. Aqua Regia digestion and ICP-OES characterization. For determining the composition of magnet particles before and after SCFE, they were digested in concentrated aqua regia (3HCl:1HNO.sub.3, approximately 20 mL per 0.25 g sample) at 200° C. (9° C./min ramp up, 20 min dwell at 200° C., 5° C./min ramp down—in a MARS6 Xpress™ microwave digestion system), followed by Inductively Coupled Plasma Optical Emission Spectrometry (Perkin Elmer Optima 7300 DV™) using the following wavelengths: Fe 238.204 nm, Nd 406.109 nm, Dy 353.170 nm, Pr 390.844 nm. Five independent digestion runs were conducted to determine the average concentration of REEs and Fe in the magnet powder feed. Prior to ICP-OES measurement, the digested samples were diluted to 50 mL total volume with DI water, filtered with a 0.45 μm polyethersulfone syringe filter (Sarstedt™), and diluted to the measurement concentration range (0.1-40 mg/L) with 5 wt % HNO.sub.3. The measured values corresponded to the average of concentrations obtained from the three measured dilution levels.
[0148] Characterization of ground NdFeB magnet powder. The chemical composition of the ground NdFeB magnet was analyzed with microwave assisted aqua regia digestion followed by inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectroscopy (ICP-OES). It was shown that the magnet comprises primarily Fe (52.4 wt %), Nd (18.5 wt %) and Pr (3.6 wt %) with a small amount of Dy (0.1 wt %), with an Fe: REE ratio of approximately 2.3:1 (See
TABLE-US-00004 TABLE 4 Typical Compositions of individual phases of the NdFeB magnets. The compositions of representative regions of the NdFeB magnet were quantified using SEM-EDS. The BSE of the magnet, with the scanned regions, is presented below. Phase Fe Nd Pr O Ce Nd.sub.2Fe.sub.14B 71.21 wt % 22.41 wt % 5.86 wt % — 0.52 wt % Phase (A) 86.40 mol % 10.53 mol % 2.82 mol % 0.25 mol % Nd-Rich 11.93 wt % 60.64 wt % 26.26 wt % 1.18 wt % — Phase (B) 23.89 mol % 47.02 mol % 20.84 mol % 8.26 mol % Nd(OH).sub.3 8.86 wt % 60.46 wt % 14.87 wt % 15.81 wt % — Phase (C) 9.49 mol % 25.08 mol % 6.31 mol % 59.11 mol %
[0149] Extraction Results. In this study, the relative effect of each operating parameter was assessed in a saturated fractional factorial design, including three replicate centre points. The resolution of this design was then increased from III to IV with a mirror-image foldover test, allowing for unaliased estimation of the primary test factors. The accuracy of the empirical model constructed from these tests was verified by a series of validation tests, which allow an independent comparison of the experimental extraction results and the model-predicted results. The experimental design matrix and the extraction results for each test are presented in Table 5.
TABLE-US-00005 TABLE 5 Overview of Experimental Design Matrix with Corresponding Processing Parameters and Extraction Efficiencies for Fe, Nd, Dy, and Pr. The saturated and mirror-image foldover results were used to construct empirical extraction models, which were verified with the validation tests. The test runs are presented in standard order but were performed in a randomized order. (S:CA = Solid:Chelating agent ratio). Run Number Pressure Time S:CA Agitation HNO.sub.3 MeOH Extraction (standard Temperature X.sub.2 X.sub.3 X.sub.4 X.sub.5 X.sub.6 X.sub.7 Efficiency (%) order) X.sub.1 (° C.) (MPa) (h) (g/mL) (rpm) (M) (wt %) Fe, Nd, Dy, Pr Saturated 1 35 20.7 1.0 0.10 1500 15.7 0 48.2, 82.1, 86.8, 79.0 2 55 20.7 1.0 0.20 750 15.7 2 60.1, 80.6, 85.8, 79.7 3 35 31.0 1.0 0.20 1500 10.4 2 50.9, 70.6, 76.0, 68.4 4 55 31.0 1.0 0.10 750 10.4 0 60.3, 76.4, 79.6, 75.7 5 35 20.7 2.0 0.10 750 10.4 2 61.8, 77.9, 81.5, 77.7 6 55 20.7 2.0 0.20 1500 10.4 0 50.3, 67.8, 74.6, 66.9 7 35 31.0 2.0 0.20 750 15.7 0 62.1, 76.5, 78.3, 73.7 8 55 31.0 2.0 0.10 1500 15.7 2 48.3, 83.8, 88.7, 81.3 9 45 25.8 1.5 0.15 1125 13.0 1 51.5, 82.8, 85.8, 80.7 10 45 25.8 1.5 0.15 1125 13.0 1 52.9, 76.2, 81.3, 75.7 11 45 25.8 1.5 0.15 1125 13.0 1 52.9, 76.5, 82.4, 75.7 Mirror-Image foldover 12 55 31.0 2.0 0.20 750 10.4 2 53.3, 69.9, 74.9, 70.7 13 35 31.0 2.0 0.10 1500 10.4 0 53.3, 75.7, 78.8, 77.1 14 55 20.7 2.0 0.10 750 15.7 0 63.6, 85.0, 87.8, 86.6 15 35 20.7 2.0 0.20 1500 15.7 2 38.5, 68.5, 74.8, 69.3 16 55 31.0 1.0 0.20 1500 15.7 0 50.4, 74.1, 78.9, 75.8 17 35 31.0 1.0 0.10 750 15.7 2 49.7, 76.7, 81.2, 76.9 18 55 20.7 1.0 0.10 1500 10.4 2 31.1, 61.1, 75.7, 56.6 19 35 20.7 1.0 0.20 750 10.4 0 49.0, 63.2, 69.4, 65.4 Validation Tests Validation 1 55 31 2 0.2 750 15.7 0 64.4, 87.7, 83.6, 81.4 Validation 2 55 31 1 0.1 750 10.4 1 55.1, 74.0, 55.4, 50.4 Validation 3 55 31 1 0.1 750 10.4 2 50.7, 86.6, 88.1, 83.9 Validation 4 55 20.7 1 0.1 1500 15.7 2 67.1, 93.6, 94.3, 86.9 Validation 5 55 20.7 1 0.1 1500 15.7 2 57.4, 94.8, 100.0, 94.2
[0150] Visual plots of the factor effect for each primary test parameter is presented in
[0151] Empirical extraction modelling. The relative effect of each primary test parameter and the aliased second-order interactions were estimated by constructing empirical extraction models by multiple Linear Least Squares Regression (mLLSR). These models do not give mechanistic insight into the extraction process, but they demonstrate how system responds to changes in each parameter. Ordered charts of model parameters alongside the model accuracy are presented in
[0152] Factors with non-zero error bars have a statistically significant effect. As can be seen in
[0153] For all three REEs, factors with significant positive impact on extraction were “HNO.sub.3 concentration in the chelating agent (X.sub.6)”, “(CA:S) ratio (X.sub.4)”, and the sum of three second-order interactions: “temperature×HNO.sub.3 concentration (X.sub.1X.sub.6)”, “pressure×agitation Rate (X.sub.2X.sub.5)”, and “time×(CA:S) ratio (X.sub.3X.sub.4)”.
[0154] Higher HNO.sub.3 concentration enhances extraction because there are more acid molecules to attack the magnet particles; thus, liberating more REEs from the solid matrix, and making more NO.sub.3— counter-ions available to form sc-CO.sub.2-soluble REE-NO.sub.3-TBP complexes. Similarly, at higher chelating agent content, more TBP molecules and NO.sub.3— ions are available to capture liberated metal ions. With regards to second order interactions with significant positive impact on REEs extraction, there is a synergistic effect between the two parameters. For example, in the cases of X.sub.1X.sub.6, high acid concentration at elevated temperature increases reactivity, and in the case X.sub.3X.sub.4, higher chelating agent content in the system requires more residence time to effectively bond to the REE ions. This observation suggests that the matrix degradation by HNO.sub.3 is the rate limiting step; thus, longer residence time is preferred for the added chelating agent to capture all REEs resulting from the matrix degradation by HNO.sub.3 molecules. For Nd and Pr, the factors with largest significant negative impact on extraction were the aliased second order interactions of “temperature×agitation rate (X.sub.1X.sub.5)”, “pressure×HNO.sub.3 concentration (X.sub.2X.sub.6)”, and “(CA:S) ratio×methanol addition (X.sub.4X.sub.7)”. These factor pairs had an antagonistic effect, meaning that when both factors were set at their high settings, extraction was partially attenuated. In the case of X.sub.4X.sub.7, simultaneous increase in the amount of chelating agent and methanol could overload the system beyond the solvation power of sc-CO.sub.2, thus decreasing the extraction efficiency. In the case of X.sub.1X.sub.5, increasing temperature has previously been shown to slightly enhance extraction in systems without mechanical agitation; however, the elevated temperature could destabilise the structure of REE-TBP-NO.sub.3 reverse micelles, increasing their susceptibility to be disrupted by mechanical forces; thus, enhancing the negative effect of increasing the agitation rate. This negative effect of increasing agitation rate could be attributed to the unfavourable effect of shear environment on the solvation of REE-TBP-NO.sub.3 reverse micelles by sc-CO.sub.2. As was mentioned, Fe showed a fundamentally different extraction behaviour, with “HNO.sub.3 concentration in the chelating agent (X.sub.6)” and “(CA:S) ratio (X.sub.4)”, the two parameters with the largest significant positive effect on REE extraction, having no significant effect, while several parameters with no significant effect on REE extraction were shown to decrease Fe extraction. Thus, the operating parameters can be tuned to selectively enhance REE extraction while decreasing Fe extraction. Residence time (X.sub.3) and pressure (X.sub.2) had the most significant positive single-parameter effects on Fe extraction efficiency. Increasing residence time allows for longer degradation of the magnet particles, thus increasing Fe extraction, while at higher pressures, the density of sc-CO.sub.2 is higher, thus it has a higher solvation power for Fe. These results suggest that while Fe extraction is controlled by the parameters that increase the magnet particle solubility in sc-CO.sub.2, the extraction of REEs is controlled by the degree of complexation of these ions with the TBP-HNO.sub.3 adducts.
[0155] Because the overall Fe extraction was significantly (α=0.05) lower than that of the REEs, it can be concluded that the Fe-CA complex is less soluble than the REE-CA complex, thus it is more susceptible to break in high shear environments, i.e., at higher agitation rate (X.sub.5). Regarding the presence of methanol as cosolvent, this factor had a negative impact on Fe extraction. Methanol addition is expected to increase metal solubility in sc-CO.sub.2 by increasing the solvent polarity and by promoting rapid desorption, preventing re-adsorption, and covering the matrix active sites, or by altering the matrix. A hypothesis to explain this observation is that there is a difference in the Fe oxidation state in the alcohol-containing environment. This finding suggests that methanol can be used as a tuning agent to selectively enhance REE extraction while reducing Fe co-extraction, thus reducing downstream separation/purification costs. The series of fractional factorial experiments and subsequent empirical model construction enabled evaluating the relative effect of the tested operating parameters on the system response and allowing for the prediction of extraction efficiency beyond the configurations tested experimentally. For instance, the conditions that resulted in maximum REE extraction (weighted by raw magnet composition and pure oxide value, is given by Settings 1 in Table 6, result in a predicted extraction efficiency of 86% for the three REEs with a selectivity of 0.60 kg.sub.REE/kg.sub.Fe. Alternatively, the process parameters settings could be adjusted as Settings 2 in Table 6 to maximize the selectivity of REE extraction over Fe extraction at 0.89 kg.sub.REE/kg.sub.Fe with a predicted extraction efficiency of 82% for the REEs. The Settings 2 results in considerably higher REE product at more economically favourable conditions, such as low process pressure and short residence time.
TABLE-US-00006 TABLE 6 Overview of optimized parameter settings and predicted extraction efficiencies, value recovery, selectivity, and value extracted in USD/kg.sub.magnet (price calculation details are provided in the Supporting Information). (S:CA = Solid:Chelating agent ratio). Predicted extraction efficiency Predicted for Fe, Average REE Pressure Residence S:CA MeOH Nd, Dy, REE Predicted value Temperature X.sub.2 time X.sub.3 X.sub.4 Agitation HNO.sub.3 X.sub.7 and Pr Recovery Selectivity extracted X.sub.1 (° C.) (MPa) (h) (g/mL) X.sub.5 (rpm) X.sub.6 (M) (wt %) (%) (%) (kg.sub.REE/kg.sub.Fe) (USD/kg.sub.magnet) Settings 1: Max REE value recovery 55 25.8* 1.5* 0.1 750 15.7 1* 60.4, 85.8, 85.8% 0.60 $23.94 86.3, 85.9 Settings 2: Max REE selectivity 55 20.7 1 0.1 1500 15.7 2 38.6, 82.3, 81.5% 0.89 $22.75 86.3, 77.9 Experimental Results: replicate 1 67.1, 93.6, 92.4% 0.58 $25.78 94.3, 86.9 Experimental Results: replicate 2 57.4, 94.8, 94.7% 0.70 $26.44 100, 94.2 *no significant effect on value recovery
[0156] On the basis of these results, the optimal operating conditions were selected as Settings 2. Two replicate runs were performed under these conditions to assess the predictability of the model (Table 6). These runs showed the highest REE extraction efficiency (92-95%) among all cases studied, even surpassing the model's prediction; however, the REE: Fe selectivity was lower than model predictions (0.58-0.70 instead of 0.89 kg.sub.REE/kg.sub.Fe). The deviation from the model can be explained by two phenomena. Because the empirical model has a resolution IV, the second order factor interaction parameters are confounded with each other, meaning that there might be interactions in the system that are not independently represented within the model that may affect the response, and/or random error and lack of model fit, since different components of the model are estimated at different confidence levels. Overall, the optimization of the operating parameters resulted a set of process conditions that yields greater than 90% overall REE extraction, which corresponds to approximately $26/kg.sub.magnet.
[0157] Effect of surface microstructure.
[0158] Effect of Methanol on extraction. The results of additional validation runs on the effect of methanol addition on Fe and REE extraction are presented in
[0159] Validation of model and comparison with NiMH results. To assess the predictability of the model, additional validation tests were conducted, which do not correspond to tests prescribed by the fractional factorial design. Furthermore, because the selected test levels were equivalent to the levels used in the previous study on NiMH batteries, model predictions for Nd and Pr in the NiMH study were also calculated. The results of empirical model correlation of the validation runs and those of NiMH battery runs are presented in
[0160] Exploration of mechanisms for the SCFE process. To uncover the mechanism of the REE and Fe extraction from NdFeB magnet using sc-CO.sub.2, experiments were conducted on synthetic mixtures containing Nd.sub.2O.sub.3, Fe.sub.2O.sub.3, and FeO. It is known that the most common oxidation number for most REEs, including Nd, is III and that Fe exists as both Fe.sup.II and Fe.sup.III. During the extraction process, HNO.sub.3 attacks ferromagnetic Nd.sub.2Fe.sub.14B and oxidizes Nd to Nd.sup.3+ and Fe to Fe.sup.2+ and Fe.sup.3+, which then react with TBP, forming metal complexes. To determine the effect of charge and elemental nature on the complexation process and hence the extraction, the SCFE of two synthetic oxide mixtures was studied, i.e., 1Fe.sup.2+:1Nd.sup.3+ (i.e., 50 wt % FeO+50 wt % Nd.sub.2O.sub.3) and 1Fe.sup.3+:1Nd.sup.3+ (i.e., Fe.sub.2O.sub.3 (50 wt %)+Nd.sub.2O.sub.3 (50 wt %)) under the test conditions of Run 16 in Table 1.
[0161]
[0162] Because Fe.sup.3+ has a similar charge to Nd.sup.3+ and during the SCFE process of synthetic mixture of 1Nd.sup.3+:1Fe.sup.3+, the composition of Nd and Fe in the post-SCFE sample was the same, it was hypothesized that Fe.sup.3+ also forms a complex with three bidentate nitrate anions and three TBP molecules, i.e., Fe(NO.sub.3).sub.3(TBP).sub.3 (Eq. 2 and 5). However, in the case of Fe.sup.2+, it can only bind with two bidentate nitrate anions and n TBP molecules, and if one considers one TPB per bidentate anion, n is expected to be 2 (Reactions 3 and 6). It is known that complexes with a higher number of TBP molecules have higher solubility is sc-CO.sub.2 due to higher number of aliphatic tails. Thus, Fe(NO.sub.3).sub.2(TBP).sub.2 is expected to have a lower solubility in sc-CO.sub.2, which is consistent with the very low extraction efficiency of Fe during the SCFE process of synthetic mixture of 1Nd.sup.3+:1Fe.sup.2+.
Nd+3HNO.sub.3.fwdarw.Nd.sup.3++3NO.sup.3−+1.5H.sub.2 (1)
Fe+3HNO.sub.3.fwdarw.Fe.sup.3++3NO.sup.3−+1.5H.sub.2 (2)
Fe+2HNO.sub.3.fwdarw.Fe.sup.2++2NO.sup.3−+H.sub.2 (3)
Nd.sup.3++3NO.sup.3−+3TBP.fwdarw.Nd(NO.sub.3).sub.3(TBP).sub.3 (4)
Fe.sup.3++3NO.sup.3−+3TBP.fwdarw.Fe(NO.sub.3).sub.3(TBP).sub.3 (5)
Fe.sup.2++2NO.sup.3−+2TBP.fwdarw.Fe(NO.sub.3).sub.2(TBP).sub.2 (6)
[0163] As demonstrated by acid-base and Karl Fisher titration, the stoichiometry of the TBP-HNO.sub.3 chelating agent is complex, which is consistent with the presence of a mixture of several different distinct adduct complexes formed by strong hydrogen bonding at the P═O site of TBP. This includes TBP-HNO.sub.3, TBP-2HNO.sub.3, TBP-H.sub.2O—HNO.sub.3, and/or complicated xTBP-yH.sub.2O-zHNO.sub.3 clusters all present in different proportions, determined by the acid concentration utilized during chelating agent preparation. The structure of some of these adduct complexes are presented in
[0164] On the basis of the results, the following molecular mechanism was proposed for the extraction of Nd (similar for other REEs) and Fe from NdFeB magnet material using TBP-HNO.sub.3 as an extracting agent in sc-CO.sub.2 (See
Conclusions from Preferred Embodiment 2
[0165] An environmentally friendly process utilizing sc-CO.sub.2 as the solvent along with TBP-HNO.sub.3 chelating agent and methanol as co-solvent was developed to extract Nd, Dy, and Pr from end-of-life NdFeB magnet. This process utilizes minimum amount of organic solvents; thus, it generates minimum amount of waste. A fractional factorial experimental design methodology was utilized to investigate the effect of seven operating parameters, resulting in 94% Nd, 94-100% Dy, and 87-94% Pr extraction with only 57-67% Fe co-extraction. An economic analysis of a full-scale industrialized iteration of this process was performed. The results indicated the process can be economically viable with a break-even processing rate of 30 kg of magnet per hour, given a final product REE purity of >99 wt % and <0.1 wt % foreign metal contamination, achieved by downstream separations, which will be developed in future work. The process was modelled as a batch process—operated continuously by employing twin extraction vessels in parallel—where one reactor is loaded while the other is operating. The largest cost drivers were capital investment for high pressure equipment and raw materials costs, particularly TBP—a TBP recycling rate of 90% was assumed (10% TBP loss was selected as a preliminary conservative estimate of the amount of the organic-soluble TBP phase, which would be lost during the stripping phase of this process). The main utility costs were the heating cost to bring CO.sub.2 to the supercritical state, and the compression cost to liquefy gaseous CO.sub.2 remaining after the depressurization stage to allow for storage.
[0166] With respect to Preferred Embodiment 2, the following conditions may preferably apply: [0167] the temperature in the reactor chamber is adjusted to a range of about 35 to 55° C.; [0168] the pressure in the reactor chamber is adjusted to a range of about 20.7 to 31 MPa, more preferably about 20.7 to 25.8 MPa; [0169] the source comprising the target metal, the chelating agent and the solvent are allowed to react in the reactor chamber for a residence time in a range of about 1 to 2 hours, more preferably about 1 to 1.5 hours; [0170] the source-to-chelating agent ratio is in a range of about 0.1 to 0.2; [0171] the source comprising the target metal, the chelating agent and the solvent are subjected to an agitation rate in a range of about 750 to 1500 rpm; [0172] the chelating agent comprises HNO.sub.3 in a concentration of about 10.4 to 15.7 M; and [0173] adding the methanol to the reactor chamber in an amount of about 0.01 to 2 mol %, more preferably about 1 to 2 mol %.
[0174] The following conditions may be more preferable: [0175] the temperature in the reactor chamber is adjusted to about 55° C.; [0176] the pressure in the reactor chamber is adjusted to about 20.7 MPa; [0177] the residence time is about 1 hour; [0178] the source-to-chelating agent ratio is about 0.1; [0179] the agitation rate is about 1500 rpm; [0180] the chelating agent comprises HNO.sub.3 in a concentration of about 15.7 M; and [0181] adding the methanol to the reactor chamber in an amount of about 2 mol %.
Preferred Embodiment 3: Extraction of Rare Earth Elements from Phosphor
[0182] In a further preferred embodiment, the source is a phosphor and the target metal in one or more rare earth elements.
Experimental Section for Preferred Embodiment 3
[0183] The feasibility of the supercritical fluid extraction of rare earth elements, strontium (Sr), and antimony (Sb) was assessed in a series of extraction trials. The feedstock for these trials was pre-separated fluorescent lightbulb (FL) luminescent material from a fluorescent lamp recycling facility.
[0184] Characterization of FL luminescent material. Prior to extraction trials, the physical and chemical characteristics of the starting luminescent material were characterized. The starting material was a powder corresponding to the inner coating of end-of-life FLs. The particle size distribution was determined by laser particle size analysis, shown in
[0185] The chemical composition of the sieved luminescent material was determined by ICP-OES, following microwave-assisted digestion in concentrated aqua regia. FL luminescent material can be considered a high grade source of REEs (39.6 wt %), and a concentrated source of Sr (1.6 wt %) and Sb (0.1 wt %).
[0186] The morphology and distribution of the various constituent elements in the luminescent material powder was determined by SEM-BSE and SEM-EDS, as shown in
TABLE-US-00007 TABLE 7 Elemental metal composition of sieved FL luminescent material. Concentrations were determined by ICP-OES, following microwave- assisted aqua regia digestion. The presented values correspond to the average over 5 trials (±standard deviation). Target materials Other Materials Composition Composition Element (wt %) Element (wt %) Yttrium (Y) 28.0 (±0.3) Calcium (Ca) 10.2 (±0.7) Lanthanum (La) 4.7 (±0.3) Aluminum (Al) 2.0 (±0.2) Cerium (Ce) 3.7 (±0.4) Barium (Ba) 0.4 (±0.1) Europium (Eu) 1.9 (±0.1) Magnesium (Mg) 0.1 (±0.02) Strontium (Sr) 1.6 (±0.1) Terbium (Tb) 1.3 (±0.1) Antimony (Sb) 0.1 (±0.01)
[0187] Extraction Results. Various extraction trials were performed under a variety of process conditions, as outlined in Table 8. The studied parameters for these trials were the extraction duration, reactor temperature, the solid to chelating agent ration, the solid to CO.sub.2 ratio, the addition of methanol as a co-solvent, and the type of chelating agent used.
TABLE-US-00008 TABLE 8 Summary of FL luminescent material extraction trial parameters. Table 8. Summary of FL luminescent material extraction trial parameters. Methanol Test Extraction Agitation Temperature Pressure addition Chelating ID time rate (rpm) (° C.) (MPa) S:CA* S:CO.sub.2** (mol %) Agent FL-1 1 h 750 50 31.0 2 g:5 ml 2 g:100 ml 0 TBP-HNO.sub.3 FL-2 1 h 750 50 31.0 5 g:5 ml 5 g:100 ml 0 TBP-HNO.sub.3 FL-3 1 h 750 50 31.0 2 g:5 ml 2 g:100 ml 0 D2EHPA-HNO.sub.3 FL-4 1 h 750 50 31.0 10 g:10 ml 10 g:100 ml 0 TBP-HNO.sub.3 FL-5 2 h 750 50 31.0 5 g:5 ml 5 g:100 ml 0 TBP-HNO.sub.3 FL-6 3 h 750 60 31.0 5 g:5 ml 5 g:100 ml 0 TBP-HNO.sub.3 FL-7a 3 h 750 60 31.0 0.5 g:5 ml.sup. 0.5 g:100 ml.sup. 2 TBP-HNO.sub.3 FL-7b 3 h 750 60 31.0 0.5 g:5 ml.sup. 0.5 g:100 ml.sup. 2 TBP-HNO.sub.3 *Solid to chelating agent ratio **Solid to CO.sub.2 ratio (g per total volume)
[0188] The extraction results for REEs are shown in
[0189] The SCFE process also extracts Sb and Sr which are considered strategic materials as well. The extraction results for Sb and Sr are shown in
[0190] In this preferred embodiment, the following conditions may be preferable: [0191] the temperature in the reactor chamber is adjusted to a range of about 50 to 70° C., more preferably about 50 to 60° C.; [0192] the pressure in the reactor chamber is adjusted to a range of about 20.7 to 45 MPa, more preferably about 31 MPa; [0193] the source comprising the target metal, the chelating agent and the solvent are allowed to react in the reactor chamber for a residence time in a range of about 0.01 to 3 hours, more preferably about 1 to 3 hours; [0194] the source-to-chelating agent ratio is in a range of about 0.05 to 1; [0195] the source comprising the target metal, the chelating agent and the solvent are subjected to an agitation rate in a range of about 0.01 to 2500 rpm, more preferably about 750 rpm; [0196] the chelating agent comprises HNO.sub.3 in a concentration of about 15.7 to 21.4 M; and [0197] adding the methanol to the reactor chamber in an amount of about 0.01 to 2 mol %.
[0198] The chelating agent may preferably be selected from the group consisting of TBP, DEHPA, HEHEHP, Bis(2,4,4-trimethylpentyl)phosphinic acid (Cyanex 272), Bis(2,4,4-trimethylpentyl)dithiophosphinic acid (Cyanex 301), di(2,4,4-trimethylpentyl) octyl phosphine oxide (Cyanex 925), Neodecanoic acid (Versatic 10) and 16,16-dimethylheptadecan-1-amine (Pimene JMT).
Preferred Embodiment 4: Extraction of Rare Earth Elements from Bauxite Residue
[0199] In yet another preferred embodiment, the source is bauxite residue and the target metal is one or more rare earth elements. This preferred embodiment may optionally include a pre-neutralization step.
[0200] In this preferred embodiment, the following conditions may be preferable: [0201] the temperature in the reactor chamber is adjusted to a range of about 35 to 55° C.; [0202] the pressure in the reactor chamber is adjusted to a range of about 20.7 to 45 MPa; [0203] the source comprising the target metal, the chelating agent and the solvent are allowed to react in the reactor chamber for a residence time in a range of about 0.01 to 2.0 hours; [0204] the source-to-chelating agent ratio is in a range of about 0.05 to 0.2; [0205] the source comprising the target metal, the chelating agent and the solvent are subjected to an agitation rate in a range of about 1500 to 2500 rpm; [0206] the chelating agent comprises HNO.sub.3 in a concentration of about 15.7 to 21.4 M; and [0207] adding the co-solvent to the reactor chamber in an amount of about 0.01 to 10 mol %.
[0208] The co-solvent may preferably be methanol or oxalic acid solution in water.
[0209] The chelating agent may preferably be selected from the group consisting of TBP, DEHPA, HEHEHP, Bis(2,4,4-trimethylpentyl)phosphinic acid (Cyanex 272), Bis(2,4,4-trimethylpentyl)dithiophosphinic acid (Cyanex 301), di(2,4,4-trimethylpentyl) octyl phosphine oxide (Cyanex 925), Neodecanoic acid (Versatic 10) and 16,16-dimethylheptadecan-1-amine (Pimene JMT).
[0210] Preferably, the chelating agent comprises an acid selected from the group consisting of nitric acid, sulfuric acid, hydrochloric acid, phosphoric acid, hydrofluoric acid, citric acid, acetic acid and oxalic acid.
Preferred Embodiment 5: Extraction of Metal from a Lithium Ion Battery
[0211] In another preferred embodiment, the source is a lithium ion battery and the target metal is one or more of lithium, nickel, and cobalt. This preferred embodiment may optionally comprise a first extraction phase to extract organic components from the lithium ion battery and a second extraction phase, using the same or different reaction conditions, to extract the lithium, nickel and/or cobalt.
[0212] In this preferred embodiment, the following conditions may be preferable: [0213] the temperature in the reactor chamber is adjusted to a range of about 35 to 60° C.; [0214] the pressure in the reactor chamber is adjusted to a range of about 20 to 45 MPa; [0215] the source comprising the target metal, the chelating agent and the solvent are allowed to react in the reactor chamber for a residence time in a range of about 0.01 to 3.0 hours; [0216] the source-to-chelating agent ratio is in a range of about 0.01 to 2; [0217] the source comprising the target metal, the chelating agent and the solvent are subjected to an agitation rate in a range of about 750 to 2500 rpm; [0218] the chelating agent comprises HNO.sub.3 in a concentration of about 0.01 to 21.4 M; and [0219] adding the co-solvent to the reactor chamber in an amount of about 0.01 to 5 mol %.
[0220] The co-solvent is preferably selected from the group consisting of methanol, Anhydrous acetonitrile (ACN) and diethyl carbonate (DEC), propylene (PE).
[0221] The chelating agent may preferably be selected from the group consisting of crown ethers, TBP, DEHPA, HEHEHP, Bis(2,4,4-trimethylpentyl)phosphinic acid (Cyanex 272), Bis(2,4,4-trimethylpentyl)dithiophosphinic acid (Cyanex 301), di(2,4,4-trimethylpentyl) octyl phosphine oxide (Cyanex 925), Neodecanoic acid (Versatic 10) and 16,16-dimethylheptadecan-1-amine (Pimene JMT).
Preferred Embodiment 6: Extraction of Gold from Activated Carbon
[0222] In another preferred embodiment, the source is activated carbon and the target metal is gold. Preferably, the activated carbon comprises Au(CN).sub.2.sup.− complex.
[0223] In this preferred embodiment, the following conditions may be preferable: [0224] the temperature in the reactor chamber is adjusted to a range of about 40 to 100° C.; [0225] the pressure in the reactor chamber is adjusted to a range of about 10 to 60 MPa; [0226] the source comprising the target metal, the chelating agent and the solvent are allowed to react in the reactor chamber for a residence time in a range of about 0.01 to 1 hour; [0227] the source-to-chelating agent ratio is in a range of about 0.01 to 1; [0228] the source comprising the target metal, the chelating agent and the solvent are subjected to an agitation rate in a range of about 750 to 1500 rpm; [0229] the chelating agent comprises HNO.sub.3 in a concentration of about 0.01 to 15.7 M; and [0230] adding the methanol to the reactor chamber in an amount of about 0.01 to 5 mol %.
[0231] The scope of the claims should not be limited by the preferred embodiments set forth in the examples, but should be given the broadest interpretation consistent with the description as a whole.