The Behaviour of Rare Earth Elements from South African Coal Fly Ash during Enrichment Processes: Wet, Magnetic Separation and Zeolitisation

Rare earth elements (REEs) are essential raw materials in a variety of industries including clean energy technologies such as electric vehicles and wind turbines. This places an ever-increasing demand on global rare earth element production. Coal fly ash (CFA) possesses appreciable levels of REEs. C...

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Main Authors: Mero-Lee Ursula Cornelius, Alechine Emmanuel Ameh, Chuks Paul Eze, Olanrewaju Fatoba, Asel Sartbaeva, Leslie Felicia Petrik
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-08-01
Series:Minerals
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2075-163X/11/9/950
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author Mero-Lee Ursula Cornelius
Alechine Emmanuel Ameh
Chuks Paul Eze
Olanrewaju Fatoba
Asel Sartbaeva
Leslie Felicia Petrik
author_facet Mero-Lee Ursula Cornelius
Alechine Emmanuel Ameh
Chuks Paul Eze
Olanrewaju Fatoba
Asel Sartbaeva
Leslie Felicia Petrik
author_sort Mero-Lee Ursula Cornelius
collection DOAJ
description Rare earth elements (REEs) are essential raw materials in a variety of industries including clean energy technologies such as electric vehicles and wind turbines. This places an ever-increasing demand on global rare earth element production. Coal fly ash (CFA) possesses appreciable levels of REEs. CFA, a waste by-product of coal combustion, is therefore a readily available source of REEs that does not require mining. CFA valorisation to zeolites has been achieved via various synthesis pathways. This study aimed to evaluate one such pathway by monitoring how REEs partition during CFA processing by the wet, magnetic separation process and zeolitisation. South African CFA was subjected to wet, magnetic separation and subsequent zeolitisation of the nonmagnetic fraction (NMF); solid products were characterised by XRD, SEM, XRF and LA-ICP-MS. The wet, magnetic separation process resulted in the partitioning of a specific set of transition metals (such as Fe, Mn, Cr, V, Ni, Zn, Cu, Co and Mo) into the magnetic fraction (MF) of CFA, while REEs partitioned into the NMF with a total REE content of 530.2 ppm; thus, the matrix elements of CFA were extracted with ease. Zeolitisation resulted in a solid zeolite product (hydroxysodalite) with a total REE content of 537.6 ppm. The process of zeolitisation also resulted in the selective enrichment of Ce (259.1 ppm) into the solid zeolite product (hydroxysodalite), while other REEs were largely partitioned into the liquid phase. CFA valorisation by wet, magnetic separation and zeolitisation therefore allowed for the partitioning of REEs into various extraction products while recovering the matrix elements of CFA such as Fe, Si and Al. The findings of this study highlight the geopolitical importance of REEs in terms of the development of alternative processes for REE recovery from waste and alternative sources, which may potentially give countries that employ and develop the technology a key advantage in the production of REEs for the global market.
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spelling doaj.art-e52f1f58a3e046a7a1c92bd12ce459e42023-11-22T14:21:00ZengMDPI AGMinerals2075-163X2021-08-0111995010.3390/min11090950The Behaviour of Rare Earth Elements from South African Coal Fly Ash during Enrichment Processes: Wet, Magnetic Separation and ZeolitisationMero-Lee Ursula Cornelius0Alechine Emmanuel Ameh1Chuks Paul Eze2Olanrewaju Fatoba3Asel Sartbaeva4Leslie Felicia Petrik5Department of Chemistry, University of the Western Cape, Bellville, Cape Town 7535, South AfricaDepartment of Chemistry, University of the Western Cape, Bellville, Cape Town 7535, South AfricaDepartment of Chemistry, University of the Western Cape, Bellville, Cape Town 7535, South AfricaDepartment of Chemistry, University of the Western Cape, Bellville, Cape Town 7535, South AfricaDepartment of Chemistry, University of Bath, Bath BA2 7AY, UKDepartment of Chemistry, University of the Western Cape, Bellville, Cape Town 7535, South AfricaRare earth elements (REEs) are essential raw materials in a variety of industries including clean energy technologies such as electric vehicles and wind turbines. This places an ever-increasing demand on global rare earth element production. Coal fly ash (CFA) possesses appreciable levels of REEs. CFA, a waste by-product of coal combustion, is therefore a readily available source of REEs that does not require mining. CFA valorisation to zeolites has been achieved via various synthesis pathways. This study aimed to evaluate one such pathway by monitoring how REEs partition during CFA processing by the wet, magnetic separation process and zeolitisation. South African CFA was subjected to wet, magnetic separation and subsequent zeolitisation of the nonmagnetic fraction (NMF); solid products were characterised by XRD, SEM, XRF and LA-ICP-MS. The wet, magnetic separation process resulted in the partitioning of a specific set of transition metals (such as Fe, Mn, Cr, V, Ni, Zn, Cu, Co and Mo) into the magnetic fraction (MF) of CFA, while REEs partitioned into the NMF with a total REE content of 530.2 ppm; thus, the matrix elements of CFA were extracted with ease. Zeolitisation resulted in a solid zeolite product (hydroxysodalite) with a total REE content of 537.6 ppm. The process of zeolitisation also resulted in the selective enrichment of Ce (259.1 ppm) into the solid zeolite product (hydroxysodalite), while other REEs were largely partitioned into the liquid phase. CFA valorisation by wet, magnetic separation and zeolitisation therefore allowed for the partitioning of REEs into various extraction products while recovering the matrix elements of CFA such as Fe, Si and Al. The findings of this study highlight the geopolitical importance of REEs in terms of the development of alternative processes for REE recovery from waste and alternative sources, which may potentially give countries that employ and develop the technology a key advantage in the production of REEs for the global market.https://www.mdpi.com/2075-163X/11/9/950coal fly ashcoal combustion productsrare earth elementsmagnetic separationzeolitisation
spellingShingle Mero-Lee Ursula Cornelius
Alechine Emmanuel Ameh
Chuks Paul Eze
Olanrewaju Fatoba
Asel Sartbaeva
Leslie Felicia Petrik
The Behaviour of Rare Earth Elements from South African Coal Fly Ash during Enrichment Processes: Wet, Magnetic Separation and Zeolitisation
Minerals
coal fly ash
coal combustion products
rare earth elements
magnetic separation
zeolitisation
title The Behaviour of Rare Earth Elements from South African Coal Fly Ash during Enrichment Processes: Wet, Magnetic Separation and Zeolitisation
title_full The Behaviour of Rare Earth Elements from South African Coal Fly Ash during Enrichment Processes: Wet, Magnetic Separation and Zeolitisation
title_fullStr The Behaviour of Rare Earth Elements from South African Coal Fly Ash during Enrichment Processes: Wet, Magnetic Separation and Zeolitisation
title_full_unstemmed The Behaviour of Rare Earth Elements from South African Coal Fly Ash during Enrichment Processes: Wet, Magnetic Separation and Zeolitisation
title_short The Behaviour of Rare Earth Elements from South African Coal Fly Ash during Enrichment Processes: Wet, Magnetic Separation and Zeolitisation
title_sort behaviour of rare earth elements from south african coal fly ash during enrichment processes wet magnetic separation and zeolitisation
topic coal fly ash
coal combustion products
rare earth elements
magnetic separation
zeolitisation
url https://www.mdpi.com/2075-163X/11/9/950
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