4.7 Article

Terephthalaldehyde-Phenolic Resins as a Solid-Phase Extraction System for the Recovery of Rare-Earth Elements

Journal

POLYMERS
Volume 14, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/polym14020311

Keywords

solid-phase extraction; terephthalaldehyde; ion exchange; rare-earth elements

Funding

  1. University Montpellier and the Labex Project CheMISyst [ANR-10-LABX-05-01]

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A solid-phase extraction system was investigated for the extraction and recovery of rare-earth elements. Phenolic ion-exchange resins were synthesized using a non-toxic aromatic dialdehyde as a substitute for toxic formaldehyde. The resins showed a high ion-exchange capacity and the ability to back-extract the rare-earth elements using an acid solution.
Rare-earth elements (REEs) are involved in most high technology devices and have become critical for many countries. The progress of processes for the extraction and recovery of REEs is therefore essential. Liquid-solid extraction methods are an attractive alternative to the conventional solvent extraction process used for the separation and/or purification of REEs. For this purpose, a solid-phase extraction system was investigated for the extraction and valorization of REEs. Ion-exchange resins were synthesized involving the condensation of terephthalaldehyde with resorcinol under alkaline conditions. The terephthalaldehyde, which is a non-hazardous aromatic dialdehyde, was used as an alternative to formaldehyde that is toxic and traditionally involved to prepare phenolic ion-exchange resins. The resulting formaldehyde-free resole-type phenolic resins were characterized and their ion-exchange capacity was investigated in regard to the extraction of rare-earth elements. We herein present a promising formaldehyde and phenol-free as a potential candidate for solid-liquid extraction REE with a capacity higher than 50 mg/g and the possibility to back-extract the REEs by a striping step using a 2 M HNO3 solution.

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