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Utilizing cost-effective pyrocarbon for highly efficient gold retrieval from e-waste leachate

Environmental Studies and Forestry

Utilizing cost-effective pyrocarbon for highly efficient gold retrieval from e-waste leachate

K. Fu, X. Liu, et al.

This groundbreaking research by Kaixing Fu and colleagues unveils an innovative, eco-friendly method for gold recovery from e-waste. Utilizing an alginate-derived pyrocarbon sorbent, they achieved remarkable recovery efficiency and purity, with the potential to transform electronic waste management and gold sourcing.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Addressing burdens of electronic waste (E-waste) leachate while achieving sustainable and selective recovery of noble metals, such as gold, is highly demanded due to its limited supply and escalating prices. Here we demonstrate an environmentally-benign and practical approach for gold recovery from E-waste leachate using alginate-derived pyrocarbon sorbent. The sorbent demonstrates potent gold recovery performance compared to most previously reported advanced sorbents, showcasing high recovery capacity of 2829.7 mg g⁻¹, high efficiency (>99.5%), remarkable selectivity (Kₐ = 3.1 × 10⁸ mL g⁻¹), and robust anti-interference capabilities within environmentally relevant contexts. The aromatic structures of pyrocarbon serve as crucial electrons sources, enabling a hydroxylation process that simultaneously generates electrons and phenolic hydroxyls for the reduction of gold ions. Our investigations further uncover a "stepwise" nucleation mechanism, in which gold ions are reduced as intermediate gold-chlorine clusters, facilitating rapid reduction process by lowering energy barriers from 1.08 to -21.84 eV. Technoeconomic analysis demonstrates its economic viability with an input-output ratio as high as 1370%. Our protocol obviates the necessity for organic reagents whilst obtaining 23.96 karats gold product from real-world central processing units (CPUs) leachates. This work introduces a green sorption technique for gold recovery, emphasizing its role in promoting a circular economy and environmental sustainability.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Jul 20, 2024
Authors
Kaixing Fu, Xia Liu, Xiaolin Zhang, Shiqing Zhou, Nanwen Zhu, Yong Pei, Jinming Luo
Tags
gold recovery
e-waste
alginate-derived sorbent
high efficiency
technoeconomic analysis
sustainable technology
purity
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