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Extraction and separation of rare earth elements from hydrothermal metalliferous sediments.
- Source :
-
Minerals Engineering . Mar2018, Vol. 118, p106-121. 16p. - Publication Year :
- 2018
-
Abstract
- Rare earth elements (REE) can be efficiently extracted from umbers, ferromanganese metalliferous sediments of the Troodos ophiolite (Cyprus) by simple leaching and selective precipitation, without accumulation of radioactive by-products. Umbers are dominantly composed of amorphous Fe and Mn oxides with minor goethite, quartz and zeolites, and contain 350–500 mg kg −1 of rare earth elements and yttrium (REY), 200 times lower than many of the major REY source ores. To compensate for relatively low grades, a cost-effective extraction process was developed that utilises a weak lixiviant concentration (0.1–1.5 N) and short reaction times (5 min to 11 h). Acid solutions recover 70–85% of the initial sample REY content even at 20 °C. By contrast, extraction using ionic solutions of NaCl and ammonium sulphate proved ineffective. Acid recoveries of REY increase by nearly 10% at 70 °C and the use of different acids (HCl, HNO 3 , H 2 SO 4 ) yields comparable results. The main impurities in the leachate include Ca and Na at even the weakest acid concentration (0.1 N). However, two-step leaching method greatly reduces concentrations of impurities in the REY-rich liquor, although with REY losses approaching 20%. Purification of the leach liquor via selective precipitation of REY as an oxalate is highly efficient although pH dependent. With maximum REY precipitation (96–99%) occurring between pH 1 and 2, the precise adjustment of pH allows separation of REY from other precipitating impurities (Ca). The maximum purity of the precipitate is achieved at pH 1.1 (>65%). Strong and consistent fractionation along the lanthanide series observed during the precipitation experiments has been successfully explained using a speciation modelling software (PHREEQC). The uptake of REY by oxalate in the experiments closely follows the bell-shape distribution of REY-oxalate solid complexes stability constant (−log β (RE 2 Ox 3 ·nH 2 O)) replicating the fractionation trends observed at pH < 1.1. In addition, the modelling demonstrates that at equivalent REE concentration in solution, oxalate precipitates fractionate REY in the following order: middle REE > light REE ≫ heavy REE. This ordering and the variable degrees of uptake reflects the interplay of aqueous REY-oxalate complexes (log HOx β 1 , Ox β 1 and Ox β 2 ) with the natural fractionation induced by solid REY-oxalate stability constant distribution. Overall, the combined leaching process and selective oxalate precipitation produces a total enrichment factor ranging between 1400 and 2400 for REY from the sample to the oxalate precipitate in a simple two-step process forming a high-purity end-product of mixed REY. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 08926875
- Volume :
- 118
- Database :
- Academic Search Index
- Journal :
- Minerals Engineering
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 128073640
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mineng.2017.12.014