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Leaching kinetics of electronic waste for the recovery of copper: Rate‐controlling step and rate process in a multisize particle system

G.I. Dávila-Pulido, Armando Salinas‐Rodríguez, Francisco Raúl Carrillo Pedroza, A.A. González-Ibarra, J. Méndez‐Nonell, M. Garza-Garcı́a

2020International Journal of Chemical Kinetics20 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract Electronic waste (e‐waste) contains metallic values that can be recovered by hydrometallurgical methods. This investigation addresses the leaching kinetics of e‐waste for the recovery of copper in H 2 SO 4 ‐H 2 O 2 media with the objective of determining the rate‐controlling step in monosize particle systems. The results are then used to develop a kinetic model for copper dissolution in multisize particle systems. It is shown that in a monosize particle system, Cu dissolves completely in 150 min at 2 M H 2 SO 4 and 0.2 M H 2 O 2 . The rate‐controlling step for this process is chemical reaction with an activation energy of 47.8 kJ/mol. The kinetic model for Cu dissolution in multisize particle systems is developed by applying an optimization method that considers the size distribution and the copper content of each of the size fractions. The results show that the model predicts satisfactorily the Cu dissolution kinetics and reveals that Cu particles with mean sizes of 79, 141, 237, 398.5, and 605 μm react completely in times varying from 15 to 120 min. Coarser Cu particles do not react completely in a time interval of up to 120 min. E‐waste losses 57.6% of its initial weight when subjected to the leaching process and solid residue has gold and silver grades of 2 402.35 and 9 035.29 g/ton, respectively.

Topics & Concepts

Leaching (pedology)ChemistryCopperDissolutionKineticsParticle sizeKinetic energyActivation energyHydrometallurgyMetalParticle (ecology)MetallurgyReaction rateAnalytical Chemistry (journal)Chemical engineeringPhysical chemistryEnvironmental chemistryMaterials scienceSoil scienceOrganic chemistryCatalysisEnvironmental scienceSoil waterQuantum mechanicsGeologyPhysicsEngineeringOceanographyRecycling and Waste Management TechniquesExtraction and Separation ProcessesRecycled Aggregate Concrete Performance