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December 23, 2024
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Gold

Researchers Pioneer Eco-Friendly Gold Extraction from Discarded Tech


The technology is commercially viable and has the potential to revolutionize gold recovery from electronic waste.ETH Zurich researchers have recovered gold from electronic waste. Their highly sustainable new method is based on a protein fibril sponge, which the scientists derive from whey, a food industry byproduct.

The researchers demonstrated this in their paper that has been published in the journal Advanced Materials.


Gold recovery with an organic process. Image Credit: ETH Zurich. Click the study paper link for the largest view.


Transforming base materials into gold was one of the elusive goals of the alchemists of yore. Now Professor Raffaele Mezzenga from the Department of Health Sciences and Technology at ETH Zurich has accomplished something in that vein.




He has not of course transformed another chemical element into gold, as the alchemists sought to do. But he has managed to recover gold from electronic waste using a byproduct of the cheesemaking process.

Electronic waste contains a variety of valuable metals, including copper, cobalt, and even significant amounts of gold. Recovering this gold from disused smartphones and computers is an attractive proposition in view of the rising demand for the precious metal.

However, the recovery methods devised to date are energy-intensive and often require the use of highly toxic chemicals.

Now, a group led by ETH Professor Mezzenga has come up with a very efficient, cost-effective, and above all far more sustainable method: with a sponge made from a protein matrix, the researchers have successfully extracted gold from electronic waste.

Selective gold adsorption


To manufacture the sponge, Mohammad Peydayesh, a senior scientist in Mezzenga’s Group, and his colleagues denatured whey proteins under acidic conditions and high temperatures, so that they aggregated into protein nanofibrils in a gel. The scientists then dried the gel, creating a sponge out of these protein fibrils.

To recover gold in the laboratory experiment, the team salvaged the electronic motherboards from 20 old computer motherboards and extracted the metal parts. Then they dissolved these parts in an acid bath so as to ionise the metals. When they placed the protein fiber sponge in the metal ion solution, the gold ions adhered to the protein fibers.

Other metal ions can also adhere to the fibers, but gold ions do so much more efficiently.

As the next step, the researchers heated the sponge. This reduced the gold ions into flakes, which the scientists subsequently melted down into a gold nugget.

In this way, they obtained a nugget of around 450 milligrams out of the 20 computer motherboards. The nugget was 91 percent gold (the remainder being copper), which corresponds to 22 carats (4.4 grams).

Economically viable

The new technology is commercially viable, as Mezzenga’s calculations show: procurement costs for the source materials added to the energy costs for the entire process are 50 times lower than the value of the gold that can be recovered.

Next, the researchers want to develop the technology to ready it for the market.

Although electronic waste is the most promising starting product from which they want to extract gold, there are other possible sources. These include industrial waste from microchip manufacturing or from gold-plating processes.

In addition, the scientists plan to investigate whether they can manufacture the protein fibril sponges out of other protein-rich byproducts or waste products from the food industry.

“The fact I love the most is that we’re using a food industry byproduct to obtain gold from electronic waste,” Mezzenga said. In a very real sense, he observed, the method transforms two waste products into gold. “You can’t get much more sustainable than that!”

**

The yield of 4.4 grams is pretty significant with gold at about $2,250 per troy ounce (31.1 grams per troy oz) (more than $315.00) or so the day of posting. Plus there are other worthwhile metals to recover.

One does wonder when the economic incentive will really hit the recoverable precious metals with a noticeable effort. The third world is still very much a dumping ground today.

By Brian Westenhaus via New Energy and Fuel

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