4.3 Article

Parametric study of an acid baking process for rare earth element recovery from a bituminous-coal source

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/19392699.2023.2269094

Keywords

Rare earth elements; Coal; Acid Baking; Leaching; Clay Dehydroxylation

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Acid baking treatment is a crucial method for extracting rare earth elements from coal-based sources. Parameters such as baking time, acid concentration, baking temperature, and the acid-to-solids ratio significantly impact the recovery of REEs and contaminant elements. Increasing the baking temperature and acid concentration can improve the REE recovery, while pure sulfuric acid and higher solution temperature contribute to higher recovery values.
Acid baking treatment is widely used to extract rare earth elements (REEs) from refractory rare earth bearing minerals such as monazite and xenotime. Since these REE minerals have been identified in coal-based sources, a parametric study was conducted to evaluate the impact and optimize the parametric values associated with the acid-baking process when treating a bituminous coal source. The parameters studied using a three-level statistical experimental program were acid baking time, acid solution concentration, baking temperature, and acid solution-to-solids ratio and each were found to significantly impact REE and contaminant element recovery. An increase in baking temperature up to around 250 degrees C improved the light and heavy REE recovery values by more than 50 absolute percentage points relative to performances achieved when direct leaching. Acid baking was needed to dehydroxylate the clays and liberate the REE minerals, which allowed access for the acid to solubilize the REEs. Acid concentration of the solution used for acid baking was studied as a means of minimizing the amount of acid needed to achieve a target REE recovery. However, thermo-gravimetric and differential scanning calorimetry analysis (TGA-DSC) of sulfuric acid under oxidizing atmosphere revealed that the addition of water decreased the evaporation temperature, which explains the lower REE recovery values obtained when using lower acid concentrations. Using pure sulfuric acid at an acid-to-solid ratio of 0.8:1 resulted in recovery values of around 70% for both LREEs and HREEs. The decomposition reaction time was relatively quick with 65% of the TREEs recovered within the first 10 minutes. Water leaching experiments performed on the acid-baked products under a temperature of 25 degrees C instead of 75 degrees C revealed an increase in REE recovery by 10 absolute percentage points, which was likely due to the high solubility of REE-sulfates at room temperatures.

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