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Membrane Solvent Extraction for the Selective Recovery of Rare Earth Elements from Neodymium-Based Permanent Magnets...

by Ramesh R Bhave, Laetitia H Delmau, Daejin Kim
Publication Type
Journal
Journal Name
Environmental Science & Technology
Publication Date
Page Numbers
9452 to 9459
Volume
49
Issue
16

The rare earth elements (REEs) such as neodymium, praseodymium, and dysprosium were successfully recovered from commercial NdFeB magnets and industrial scrap magnets via membrane assisted solvent extraction (MSX). A hollow fiber membrane system was evaluated to extract REEs in a single step with the feed and strip solutions circulating continuously through the MSX system. The effects of several experimental variables on REE extraction such as flow rate, concentration of REEs in the feed solution, membrane configuration, and composition of acids were investigated with the MSX system. A multi-membrane module configuration with REEs dissolved in aqueous nitric acid solutions showed high selectivity for REE extraction with no co-extraction of non-REEs, whereas the use of aqueous hydrochloric acid solution resulted in co-extraction of non-REEs due to the formation of chloroanions of non-REEs. The REE oxides were recovered from the strip solution through precipitation, drying, and annealing steps. The resulting REE oxides were characterized with XRD, SEM-EDX, and ICP-OES, demonstrating that the membrane assisted solvent extraction is capable of selectively recovering pure REEs from the industrial scrap magnets.