Introduction
Rare earth elements (REEs) are used in a variety of green technologies, such as permanent magnets , electric vehicles, Ni–MH batteries , among others, and are instrumental in the progression towards a low carbon economy [1, 2]. REEs are in demand from growing clean energy sector and the supply chain for REEs is fragile due to monopolistic supply conditions. Thus, REEs are classified as critical metals [3–5]. Magnet recycling and REEs recovery from end-of-life (EoL) products can mitigate the supply risks and help formulate a circular and sustainable economy [6, 7]. Neodymium iron boron (Nd2Fe14B or NdFeB for short) magnets have a very high energy density, are the strongest permanent magnets currently available, and 22% of rare earth oxides produced globally in 2014 were consumed for the production of these magnets [8]. Consequently, they are widely used in wind turbines, hybrid and electric vehicles (HEVs and EVs), household electrical appliances, computer hard disk drives (HDDs), and many small consumer electronic devices.
NdFeB permanent magnets have different life cycles, depending on their applications: from as short as 2–3 years in consumer electronics to 20–30 years in wind turbines. The size of the magnets range from less than 1 g in small consumer electronics to over 1 kg in EVs and HEVs, and can be as large as 1000–2000 kg in the generators of modern wind turbines. NdFeB magnet contains about 31–32 wt% REEs, mainly Nd and Pr plus a few minor, but expensive, heavy REEs (HREEs), such as Dy, Tb and Gd. Recycling of REEs contained in this type of magnets from the EoL products will play an important and complementary role for the primary supply of REEs in the future. However, collection and recovery of the magnet from small consumer electronics imposes great social and technological challenges. To date, no commercial operation is identified to recycle REEs from EoL products. It is simply cheaper to buy REE metals from the primary production than to reprocess the complex scrap material from recycled resources [9, 10], especially for small-sized products where manual separation of the magnets is challenging. In industrial practice, most household electrical and electronic devices are currently shredded, and their magnetic content, mainly iron and neodymium, tends to end up in the ferrous scrap stream, which is too dilute and difficult for economically feasible REE recovery .
At present, no mature and economically feasible technologies have been identified for recycling EoL NdFeB permanent magnets and the recovery of the associated REEs. Most of the processing methods are still at different levels of development stage, as revealed by recent reviews [11, 12]. Selective extraction of REEs over iron is the major objective of NdFeB recycling processes. Pyrometallurgical pre-treatment steps such as oxidation , sulfation , and nitration roasting enable selective extraction of REEs into solution. Iron in the NdFeB magnet is converted to its Fe(III) form in this pre-treatment step. Subsequently REEs are leached into the solution using acid or water leaving iron oxide /hydroxide in the residue. Though these processes are quite effective, they often have very high operational temperature and are thus, energy intensive [13–15]. In contrast, wet chemical recycling processes take place at room temperature . In wet chemical processes, magnet waste is completely dissolved into the solution. Then, a selective precipitating agent, such as NaOH, Na2SO4, or HF is added to selectively precipitate REEs as sulfates or fluorides [16]. However, these processes consume non-recyclable chemicals, such as sulfuric acid , HF, and NaOH, generating a large amount of wastewater .
REE Recovery from WEEE Shredder Scrap
REEcover Project
The REEcover recycling project (http://reecover.eu) was started in the wake of the 2011 REE price spike [17]. The EU has no active domestic production of REEs and is entirely dependent on imports to meet its demands. The sudden change in the REE market made it clear that the EU was unprepared to deal with a potential shortage in REEs. REEcover was started as a means to tackle this challenge by establishing a domestic source of REEs through the recycling of high-volume low-grade REE-containing waste products. The project identified the iron ore mine tailings from the LKAB mine in Kiruna, Sweden (https://www.lkab.com/en), and shredded WEEE (Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment ) from Indumetal Recycling , Spain (http://www.indumetal.com), as the two most promising waste steams for REE recycling . In this paper, only REE recovery from the shredded WEEE will be described and discussed.
The Shredded WEEE Scrap
Chemical composition (wt%) of the upgraded shredder WEEE (ferrous stream)
Element | Fe | Zn | Mn | Ca | Cu | Ni | Si |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Average concentration (wt%) | 58 | 7.5 | 3.12 | 2.4 | 2.0 | 1.16 | 1.00 |
Standard deviation (σ, wt%) | 2 | 0.2 | 0.04 | 0.2 | 0.1 | 0.03 | 0.06 |
Element | Nd | Al | Pb | Mg | Pr | Sm | Dy |
Average concentration (wt%) | 0.99 | 0.55 | 0.5 | 0.260 | 0.16 | 0.07 | 0.030 |
Standard deviation (σ, wt%) | 0.01 | 0.02 | 0.5 | 0.003 | 0.01 | 0.04 | 0.002 |
Hydrometallurgical Route for REE Recovery
The leaching of the oxidized WEEE is conducted using a 3% H2SO4 with a L/S ratio of 5 at room temperature . It is found that under these leaching conditions the extraction rate of Nd (~90%) is considerably higher than that of Fe (ca. 20%) and that if the reaction is run for only a limited time (5–10 min) a very high selectivity for Nd can be achieved. Once the REEs have been leached they can be recovered via precipitation , while the iron -bearing residue can be used as the secondary materials for ironmaking. Overall the process achieves over 90% recovery of REEs, while limiting the extraction of the other elements below 5%.
Combined Pyro- and Hydrometallurgical Route for REE Recovery
In parallel to the development of the hydrometallurgical recycling process a pyrometallurgical process was developed as an alternative. This pyrometallurgical process was developed by our project partners at NTNU (http://ntnu.no) and was based on the high oxygen affinity of the REEs. The pyrometallurgical process aims to produce REE rich slags that are highly upgraded in REE concentration to serve as an alternative to the thermal demagnetization upgrading process. These slags are then sent to TU Delft for hydrometallurgical processing to extract the REEs.
The REEcover project was successful in designing the processing routes through the lab scale and demonstrated at pilot scale, and the technology is viable for further upscaling for the recovery of REEs from low REE concentration waste stream in the existing WEEE shredding plant. The demonstrated hydrometallurgical WEEE recycling process above is very efficient and requires only a minimal amount of chemicals to recover the REEs. The combined pyro- and hydrometallurgical route can recover both ferrous scrap and iron in the NdFeB magnet as iron -based alloy and the REE species through the formed slag . The major cost is attributed to energy consumption for the smelting of the WEEE waste at high temperature which may however be compensated by the resource savings through production of the crude iron .
REE Recovery from HDD Shredder Residue
Present Industrial Practice
This study is targeted for the REE recovery from separately shredded computer hard disk drives (HDDs) in a current industrial practice [18]. Pre-dismantling of computer HDDs have been reported by some companies mainly for data security reasons, although this is not a standard practice for normal personal computers from offices and homes. The dismantled hard disk drives are shredded, and normally, the ferrous and nonferrous scraps as well as the printed circuit boards (PCBs) are sold as raw materials for further metal recovery in smelters. In most cases, the REE magnet particles after shredding are not recovered although the REE concentration is much higher than those in the shredded ferrous products from the whole EoL product (e.g., computers). In the Netherlands, Van Gansewinkel Group (VGG, now Renewi) operates a small plant for HDD shredding and data destruction. The generated magnet residue in the shredder was used in the present study on REE recovery .
Mechanical Upgrading
In the present study, it was found that a feasible REE-recovery process is dependent on an efficient liberation and separation of the magnets from the other components of the HDDs, thereby minimizing the amount of bulk contaminations. The study indicates that when a coarse shredder was used for this purpose, magnets were poorly liberated from other components. When a fine shredder was applied, magnets were broken into small particles, and the 30 mm steel grate was revealed as an effective tool to retain the magnetic content while still allowing continuous flow of nonmagnetic materials into the outlet stream. Even in this case, however, the as-collected grate residue still contains some nonmagnetic metallic pieces (mostly steel ). The total mass ratio of magnet to non-magnet pieces was approximately 2.2 through hand sorting. With this approach, approximately 70% of the magnet particles were collected in the grate for further processing.
The separately collected magnet residues go through a thermal demagnetization process followed by grinding and screening. After a mild grinding and screening, the magnet-concentrated particles of less than 1 mm in diameter represent approximately 63% of the total collected shredder residue, and a total recovery rate of 95% has been achieved for all the REEs in the collected residues through physical processing. The concentration of REEs (Nd and Pr) was upgraded from 5–7% in the as-collected fine shredder residues to about 17–20% after the above-mentioned physical processing.
Metallurgical REE Recovery
As for the metallurgical recovery , the two tested methods both have their advantages. Pyrometallurgical treatment with slag extraction showed that both CaO–SiO2–Al2O3, and CaO–CaF2 slag systems are suitable for full extraction of the rare earths from the magnet scrap into the slag , yielding two products: a concentrated RE-containing slag and an iron -based alloy ingot with more than 99% rare earths and iron recovery . This iron -based alloy is a good source of scrap for steelmaking . Although the recovery of REEs from the slag by leaching with 2.0 M H2SO4 is not yet as efficient as direct leaching , the results are promising for further investigation and optimization . In the second route, the upgraded scrap was directly leached to dissolve 97% rare earth content, under the conditions of 2.0 M H2SO4 at liquid-to-solid ratio of 20, and with mechanical agitation for 8 h at room temperature . The combination of the different steps makes it possible to obtain high recovery of a relatively pure rare earths double sulfate (NaNd(SO4)2.H2O) of 98.4% purity.
After assessing the complete recovery routes, experimental results currently are in favor of the direct hydrometallurgical route. Additionally, this route provides the opportunity to collect recoverable amounts of valuable metals , such as Cu, Ni, Ag, and sometimes Au and Pd through the leach residues, making it a valuable by-product. Many impurities (primarily iron ) are dissolved in sulfuric acid , and these will be removed after the precipitation of rare earths. While fine-tuning will be necessary before this processing route can be implemented commercially, the route developed in this study provides a feasible transition into commercial recovery operation that can positively influence the current European market dynamics of critical metals supply. The choice of using the existing industrial machinery will significantly reduce new investment costs for equipment and operation for the industry. In addition, as shredding is not specially designed for HDDs, the developed route is also suitable for the treatment of other waste streams (EoL products) that contain NdFeB magnets . This makes the developed processing route increasingly more attractive in the future.
REE Recovery from Magnet Waste Using Electrochemical Oxidation
EREAN Project
This research is part of the EU project EREAN (http://erean.eu). EREAN (European Rare Earth Magnet Recycling Network) is the FP7 Marie-Curie Initial Training Network Project, focusing on the recycling of NdFeB permanent magnets . Research challenges include the development of efficient extraction of rare earth containing materials from electronic waste scrap, removal of exogens by pyro- and hydrometallurgical methods to produce a concentrate of rare earths, new separation methods, direct electrochemical reduction of rare-earth oxides into metals, and the preparation of new magnets . The present work focuses on electrochemical dissolution of rare earths in the permanent magnets to generate REE-bearing iron -free solutions for RE oxide preparation. The result presented in this part of the paper is one of the technology routes: combined chemical and electrochemical process.
Materials and Method
Chemical composition of the magnet (wt%)
Element | Fe | Nd | Dy | Co | B | Pr | Cu | Ga | Al | Gd | Ni | Si | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
wt% | 66.34 | 22.10 | 5.78 | 2.89 | 1.11 | 0.91 | 0.19 | 0.17 | 0.17 | 0.09 | 0.06 | 0.02 | 99.8 |
REE Recovery Flowsheet
Monitoring of anode potential over time revealed that the anodic oxidation of Fe(II) was the predomination mechanism, while in cathode hydrogen evolution was the predominant reaction. Back reduction of Fe(III) to Fe(II) in cathode was avoided by choosing a large ratio between anode area to cathode area. The overall energy consumption of this process was around 1.4 kWh/kg of iron .
In the parallel route, the leachate was neutralized with ammonia to remove iron from the leachate completely as Fe(OH)3 precipitate. A pink leachate was produced rich in REEs and cobalt . Subsequently, oxalic acid was added to this leachate at a ratio of 2:1 to selectively precipitate REEs leaving cobalt in the solution. The precipitated rare earth oxalates were calcined to obtain rare earth oxides of high purity (99.5%). It was also demonstrated that it is feasible to recover cobalt from the solution as metallic cobalt through an electrowinning process.
In the direct precipitation route, an excess of oxalic acid was necessary to recover REEs. However, it produced no acid waste and ferric chloride produced can be directly sold as chemical by-product. Unlike the direct precipitation route, the neutralization route involves multiple steps and consumes ammonia , which cannot be recycled. However, the neutralization route also provides the possibility to obtain the additional valuable metal in the form of pure cobalt solution or metallic cobalt .
In addition to the above mentioned electro-oxidation route, another electrochemical process was developed through selective extraction of REEs from NdFeB magnet waste at room temperature . A two-chamber membrane electrochemical reactor was used for REE recovery with an anion exchange membrane in between the compartments [21]. The kinetics of the extraction can be enhanced with increasing current density. HCl used in the leaching step can be recovered back after the oxalic acid precipitation step making the whole process closed-loop and environmentally friendly.
Concluding Remarks
REEs are the most critical materials in Europe and the world. Increasing demand for NdFeB permanent magnets will cause potential shortage of REE supply in the future. Magnet recycling and REE recovery from magnet wastes and EoL products will mitigate the future supply shortage. However, there have been no commercial magnet and REE recycling from EoL electrical and electronic products, due mainly to technological and economic reasons. At present, there have been no economically viable technologies available for magnet recycling from EoL products. WEEE is the main source of small sized NdFeB permanent magnet applications, and is very difficult to recycle the magnets and the contained REEs. The present REE market with relatively low prices is not in favor of the recycling operation.
The small sized NdFeB magnets in electrical and electronic products are not suitable for reuse or remanufacturing and direct magnet recycling , unless the clean magnets could be effectively liberated. The three research examples described in this paper demonstrate strategies for efficient REE recovery from EoL permanent magnets based on present industrial practice of WEEE shredding, before cost efficient magnet liberation technologies are developed. Different shredding practices generate REE magnet bearing waste streams at different concentration levels. The magnet residues from the ferrous scrap stream could be collected for REE recovery (Nd, Pr, Dy, Tb, etc.) through physical upgrading and metallurgical recovery . Direct hydrometallurgical, combined pyro- and hydrometallurgical, as well as the electrochemical routes have been developed with different merits. The key to success is the selective REE extraction over the iron and other transition metals in the magnet and the waste residues. The other challenges are to reduce the use of chemical reagents, minimize effluent generation, and improve the total resource recovery of other non-REE constituents (steel and other transition metals).
Acknowledgements
The research presented in this paper has received the funding from the two EU FP7 funded projects MC-ITN EREAN (project no. 607411) and REEcover (project no. 603564), as well as the industrial funding from Van Gansewinkel Group (now Renewi) in the Netherlands.