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Electrocatalytic recovery of elements from complex mixtures using deep eutectic solvents

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journal contribution
posted on 2015-03-11, 10:02 authored by Andrew P. Abbott, Robert C. Harris, Fay Holyoak, G. Frisch, J. Hartley, Gawen R. T. Jenkin
The dissolution and subsequent selective recovery of elements from complex mixtures naturally necessitates redox chemistry. The majority of processes involve hydrometallurgical dissolution followed by selective chemical precipitation or electrochemical winning. The atom and energy efficiencies of these processes are poor, leading to a large volume of aqueous waste which needs to be treated before disposal. In this study it is demonstrated that electrocatalysis is an atom effective method of carrying out digestion and subsequently recovering elements from solution. Here deep eutectic solvents are used to simplify the speciation of solutes and to allow redox potentials to be modified compared to standard aqueous values. The redox catalyst used is iodine, as it demonstrates high solubility, fast electron transfer and the ability to oxidise most elements, including precious metals such as gold. The efficacy of this electrocatalyic method is demonstrated using three samples; Cu/Zn, Ga/As and Au/Ag/sulfidic ore.

Funding

The authors thank the EPSRC and 5NPlus for a studentship for JH.

History

Citation

Green Chemistry, 2015

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Chemistry

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Green Chemistry

Publisher

Royal Society of Chemistry

issn

1463-9262

eissn

1463-9270

Copyright date

2014

Available date

2015-12-15

Publisher version

http://pubs.rsc.org/en/Content/ArticleLanding/2015/GC/C4GC02246G

Notes

Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/ c4gc02246g

Language

en

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