5/22/2015 1 Chalmers University of Technology Hydrometallurgy at CTH Hydrometallurgy Seminar March 7 th 2015 Chalmers University of Technology Sweden Göteborg • 12 campuses in the middle of Gothenburg • 8 departments • 41 Master’s programs all taught in English • 11 800 students • 1 200 PhD students • ~40 % of Sweden’s graduate engineers/architects educated at Chalmers
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Hydrometallurgy at CTH...NaI:s – manual and automated SiLi spectrometers and automated systems and automated systems Liquid scintillation counters AKUFVE (Ti & PEEK) Surface tension
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5/22/2015
1
Chalmers University of Technology
Hydrometallurgy at CTH
Hydrometallurgy Seminar March 7th 2015
Chalmers University of Technology
Sweden
Göteborg
• 12 campuses in the middle of Gothenburg
• 8 departments
• 41 Master’s programs all taught in English
• 11 800 students
• 1 200 PhD students
• ~40 % of Sweden’s graduate engineers/architects educated at Chalmers
5/22/2015
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Chalmers University of Technology
Chalmers University of Technology
Short history of Nuclear Chemistry & Industrial Materials Recycling
• 1947 • 1989– Nuclear Chemistry founded
as “Atomkommitténskärnkemilaboratorium”. Headed by Karl Erik Zimenand later Roland Lindner
• 1963– Department of Nuclear
Chemistry formed, Jan Rydberg first full professor
– Jan-Olov Liljenzin new professor
• 2001– Lembit Sihver new professor
• 2007– Industrial Materials
Recycling formed, Christian Ekb fi t fEkberg first professor
A modular mixer‐settler‐system wasdeveloped and originally used for hotdeveloped and originally used for hottests of the CTH‐process forpartitioning. The volume of the mixingchamber is approximately 30 mL whilethe settler has a volume ofapproximately 100 mL. The impeller ofthe mixer is made of PVDF while therest of the mixer‐settler can be built ofe.g. PVDF or plexiglass. The level of thephase boundary surface is controlledby electronic level meters based on
conductivity measurements.
The picture shows a newly designed mixersettler
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Chalmers University of Technology
AKUFVE
Ti-AKUFVE1. Centrifuge2. Mixing vessel3. Flow measurement4. Sampling and mixing pumps5. Heat exchanger6. pH-electrode7. Thermo element
• The H-centrifuge has a very short hold-up time and it istherefore also used to study short-lived nuclides and thetransactinide elements. This technique is called SISAK.
• The original H-33 centrifuge (120 mL volume/phase, 30 mL/s,phase) diminished to H-10 (12 mL/plase, 25 mL/s,phase) to H-0.3 (0.3 mL/phase, 3 mL/s,phase)
• Selective extraction systems developed for 27 elements (from fi i d t h i ti d t i t )fission product or heavy-ion reaction product mixtures)
• Detection techniques for very short-lived nuclides
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Chalmers University of Technology
SISAK
Chalmers University of Technology
SISAK
• Most short-lived studied so far: 114Ru (T½ = 0.47 s)
• First identification of about 20 previously unknown nuclides
• Nuclear studies of about 80 short-lived nuclides
• Chemical studies of Rf, Db and Sg
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Chalmers University of Technology
Use of solvent extraction at CTH
Nuclear Chemistry
Industrial Materials Recycling
Nuclear Chemistry
Industrial Materials Research
As part of other
courses
As dedicated course
Applied Research EducationFundamental research
Chalmers University of Technology
Education
• KBT192 – Nuclear Chemistry Iy
• KBT168 – Nuclear Chemistry II
• KBT200 – Radiopharmaceutical Chemistry
• KBT215 – Radioecology and Radioanalytical Chemistry
• KBT171 – Chemistry of Lanthanides, Actinides and Super-heavy Elements
• KBT195 – Solvent extraction
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Chalmers University of Technology
Solvent extraction course
• Lectures
• Calculation Exercises
• Laboratory project (separation of Co, Cu and Zn)– Batch extraction
– AKUFVE extraction
– Mixer-settler
• Course divided in two tracks:NE– NE
– POWRES
– About 80% of the course is identical (thermodynamics, extractionsystems, equipment, multistage extraction etc.)
Chalmers University of Technology
Solvent extraction course
• NE-track • POWRES-track• NE-track– Uranium production
– Reprocessing of nuclear fuel
– Partitioning and transmutation
• POWRES-track– Leaching of metal
scrap and ashes
– Methods for production and recycling of e.g. Cu, Co Ni Zn Pt Rh– Other processes of
interest in nuclear engineering
Co, Ni, Zn, Pt, Rh, lanthanides, …
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Chalmers University of Technology
The connection SX – Nuclear Chemistry
• Why have almost all SX chemists started as (or still are) nucleary ( )chemists?
Chalmers University of Technology
The connection SX – Nuclear Chemistry
• Why have almost all SX chemists started as (or still are) nucleary ( )chemists?
• The first large scale application of inorganic SX was in the fieldof nuclear technology (U production, reprocessing). SX chemistry studies are also rather easy if using radioactivetracers.
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Chalmers University of Technology
The connection SX – Nuclear Chemistry
• Why have almost all SX chemists started as (or still are) nucleary ( )chemists?
• The first large scale application of inorganic SX was in the fieldof nuclear technology (U production, reprocessing). SX chemistry studies are also rather easy if using radioactivetracers.
• Knowledge and experience from the nuclear chemistry research group is implemented in the industrial materials research group– this gives added value
Chalmers University of Technology
Research
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Chalmers University of Technology
Selected projects
RECYVAL NANO
SOE• recycling of Li-ion
b tt i
MAXIMA • lead-cladding-
SEARCH • lead fuel
• recycling of In and REE
batteries
LISSEN • Li-ionbattery
recycling
COLABATS • cobalt recycling
from Li-ion
EREAN • lanthanide
recycling
SACSESS • recycling of
nuclear waste
gfuel interactions interaction
SKIN • Ra/Ba solubilities
CINCH-II• EU teaching in
NC
SKB• Simfuel surfaces
TALISMAN• Int’l infrastructure
access
Pilot plant• NiMH batteries
REE recovery• Fluorescent lamp
waste
SKB• Sorption
modelling
ASGARD• nuclear fuel
Chalmers University of Technology
Selected projects
MAXIMA • lead-cladding-
SEARCH • lead fuel
RECYVAL NANO
SOE• recycling of Li-ion
b tt ig
fuel interactions interaction
SKIN • Ra/Ba solubilities
CINCH-II• EU teaching in
NC
SKB• Simfuel surfaces
TALISMAN• Int’l infrastructure
access
• recycling of In and REE
batteries
LISSEN • Li-ionbattery
recycling
COLABATS • cobalt recycling
from Li-ion
EREAN • lanthanide
recycling
SACSESS • recycling of
nuclear waste
SKB• Sorption
modelling
ASGARD• nuclear fuel
Pilot plant• NiMH batteries
REE recovery• Fluorescent lamp
waste
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Chalmers University of Technology
SOE (styrkeområde energi) - recycling HEV Li-ion Batteries
(Sravya Kosaraju, Christian Ekberg, Britt-Marie Steenari, Stefan Allard)
Chalmers University of Technology
Process steps
Blackmass
Al‐ substrate
Li‐ion ba ery
Leaching black mass
Akufve Mixer se ler
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Chalmers University of Technology
Leaching – HCl
120
20
40
60
80
100R
eco
ver
y in
lea
chat
e (%
)
Al-FB
Al-SC
Li-FB
Li-SC
Fe-FB
Fe-SC
P-FB
P-SC
00 1 2 3 4 5 6
c (M)
Chalmers University of Technology
Solvent extraction
• Aq: Li, Mn, Ni HCl in chloride mediaq
• Org: Cyanex 272 (5%vol)/Solvent 70
Cyanex 272
60
80
100
120
%E %E, Li
%E, Mn
0
20
40
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
pH
%E, Ni
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Chalmers University of Technology
Short-circuited/damaged
Sort basisState of charge
&/damage
Dismantle in Ar‐atmosphereDischarge
Dismantle in
LiFePO4
Batteries
Un-damaged
Electrolyte
Removal of Electrolyte & built-up gas
vaporizes
SeparateDismantle in fume hood
ElectrolyteRemoval
AnodeUltra‐sonicationMedium:H2O
Time1h, S/L 1:50
CathodeUltra‐sonicationMedium:H2O
Time1hS/L 1:50
Filter FilterCusubstrate
Alsubstrate
pAnodes & cathodes
Anode Cathode
Electrochemically active material:
Remnant H2O after ultra‐sonication and filtration
PvDf free carbon powder
Acidify with HCl
active material: carbon
Heat in O2 free atmcarbon 200C
Electrochemically active material: LiFePO4
SX, solvent70 (1M) Cyanex 272
Strip Organic phase
Li separation
Chalmers University of Technology
• Colabats EU project on battery recycling (NiMH andColabats EU project on battery recycling (NiMH and Li ion)– Solvent Extraction from ionic liquids and related solvents
– Solvent extraction from mixtures with very high ionic strengths
– Both deep eutectics based on choline chloride (below) and true ionic liquids are being used
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Chalmers University of Technology
(Marino Gergoric, Mikhail Tyumentsev)( g , y )
• Recycling of rare earths– RE permanent magnets
– e.g. Sm, Co, Nd
– Solvent extraction used; separation difficult due to similarities of chemical properties
Chalmers University of Technology
EREAN
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Chalmers University of Technology
Recovery of rare earth elements from fluorescent lamp waste
phosphor fractions
(Cristian Tunsu, Teodora Retegan)
Chalmers University of Technology
Lamp phosphors based on REEs
Ph h t P ibl dPhosphor type Possible compounds
Red phosphor Y2O3∶Eu3+
Blue phosphors BaMgAl10O17∶Eu2+
(Sr,Ca,Ba)5(PO4)3Cl:Eu2+
Green phosphors CeMgAl10O17∶Tb3+
LaPO4:Ce3+,Tb3+
(Ce,Tb)MgAl11O19
(Ce Gd Tb)MgB O
CeCe
EuEu
YY
LaLa
TbTbGdGd
(Ce,Gd,Tb)MgB5O10
Cuif et al., 2005; Ronda et al., 1998; US Department of Energy, 2009; Raposo et al., 2003
Standard lamp: 4-6 g phosphors powder (2% of the lamp’s mass).
Grouped Actinide Extraction Process Research at Chalmers
(Emma Aneheim, Christian Ekberg, Jenny Halleröd, Elin Löfström-Engdahl)
Chalmers University of Technology
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Chalmers University of Technology
Transmutation
Chalmers University of Technology
Transmutation requires separation from fission, corrosion and
activation products solvent extraction
At Chalmers we are working with a so called Grouped actinide extraction
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Chalmers University of Technology
The research has two branches:1. Process development2. Basic Science
An example of process optimization: exchange of the diluentcyclohexanone to the diluent phenyl trifluoromethyl sulfonecyclohexanone to the diluent phenyl trifluoromethyl sulfone
An example of basic research: investigating the influence of extractantAn example of basic research: investigating the influence of extractantconcentration on the rate of americium extraction. This feature is importantfor process development as well as separation of elements.
Chalmers University of Technology
Pilot plant – NiMH batteries
Hydrometallurgical technology for recovery of metalsHydrometallurgical technology for recovery of metals from spent car NiMH batteries
(Martina Petranikova, Irena Herdzik-Koniecko, Kristian Larsson, Britt-Marie Steenari, Christian Ekberg)
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Chalmers University of Technology
Current state of HEVs technology
• Road transport is responsible for 17-18% of global CO2 emissions from fossil fuel comb stioncombustion.
• NiMH battery technology is most used in HEVs technology.
• Lifetime of the battery = lifetime of the vehicle (250 000 – 320 000km).
Chalmers University of Technology
Current state of NiMH recycling
Mechanical pre-treatment
Pyrometallurgical treatment
Hydrometallurgical treatment
REEs
slag
Umicore Rhodia
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Chalmers University of Technology
Hydrometallurgical process developed at Chalmers
1. Dismantling of batteries
2. Leaching of electrode material with HCl
3. Solvent extraction using Cyanex 923
Chalmers University of Technology
1. Dismantling of batteries
2. Leaching of electrode material with HCl
3. Solvent extraction using Cyanex 923
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Chalmers University of Technology
Chalmers University of Technology
NiMH battery dismantling
1.4%
0.5%
1.7%
19.8%
0.6%
1.4% Toyota Prius Battery – before dismantling Battery modules (38)
74.6%
cables and copper aluminium
modules plastic
steel printed circiut boards
other
Other components
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Chalmers University of Technology
1. Dismantling of batteries
2. Leaching of electrode material with HCl
3. Solvent extraction using Cyanex 923
Chalmers University of Technology
Equipment
L hi
- glass reactor with double wall
(with heating/cooling system)
- volume: 2 or 5L
- titration devices
Leaching
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Chalmers University of Technology
1. Dismantling of batteries
2. Leaching of electrode material with HCl
3. Solvent extraction using Cyanex 923
Chalmers University of Technology
• Extractant: Cyanex 923:
mixture of trialkyl-phosphine oxides:
R P(O) R R'P(O) RR' P(O) R' P(0)R3P(O), R2R'P(O), RR'2P(O), R'3P(0)