Dynamic Mineral Recrystallization – Implications for Sustainable Trace Metal Recovery from Deep-Sea Ferromanganese Deposits

International Marine Minerals Society
Tobias Hens Barrie Bolton Joël Brugger Barbara Etschmann Andrew Frierdich
Organization:
International Marine Minerals Society
Pages:
4
File Size:
217 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2017

Abstract

"Ferromanganese (Fe-Mn) nodules and crusts are prime targets for future deep-sea mining ventures due to their unusual enrichment of critical metals, such as Ni, Co, Cu, Ti, Te, Zr, Hf, Nb, Y, and REE. These metals are used in an ever increasing variety of high- and green-tech applications such as alloys, batteries for hybrid cars, fiber-optic cables, or liquid-crystal displays.1 Recovery and processing of these deposits will most likely be cost-intensive and require new solutions.2 Thus, innovative approaches towards the development of sustainable metallurgical processes represent one component that can positively affect the marine mining value chain. Dynamic mineral recrystallization of Fe- Mn oxide phases is a geochemical process that may have notable potential for future hydrometallurgical applications.Our research focuses on Mn oxides – potent trace metal scavengers with high sorptive capacity3 – and biogeochemical mechanisms that control Fe-Mn nodule and crust formation, alteration, and trace element enrichment. Biogeochemical redox cycling of Mn is characterized by microbial oxidation of aqueous Mn(II) to Mn(III,IV) oxides and (a)biotic reduction of these oxides to Mn(II)aq. During this cycling dissolved Mn(II) is in direct contact with solid-phase Mn(III,IV) oxides and can back-react via abiotic pathways (e.g., 4 and references therein). This results in continuous dynamic recrystallization of the Mn mineral substrate through coupled dissolution (trace metal release) – reprecipitation (trace metal incorporation) processes.4 We recently demonstrated in new experiments, that Ni is cycled during manganite recrystallization. It has been shown that, although Ni readily undergoes mineral-fluid repartitioning in the absence of Mn(II)aq, dissolved Mn(II) significantly catalyzes Ni exchange between solid phase and solution. Over a period of 50 days about 30 percent of the Ni atoms in Ni-substituted manganite (natural abundance composition) were exchanged with a 62Ni(II)aq isotope tracer at pH 7.5. Based on these outcomes we employed similar techniques to investigate the impact of dynamic recrystallization on Mn oxide phases in deep-sea ferromanganese nodules and crusts from three circum-Australian locations (South Tasman Rise, Lord Howe Rise, Coral Sea) and the Central Pacific Basin."
Citation

APA: Tobias Hens Barrie Bolton Joël Brugger Barbara Etschmann Andrew Frierdich  (2017)  Dynamic Mineral Recrystallization – Implications for Sustainable Trace Metal Recovery from Deep-Sea Ferromanganese Deposits

MLA: Tobias Hens Barrie Bolton Joël Brugger Barbara Etschmann Andrew Frierdich Dynamic Mineral Recrystallization – Implications for Sustainable Trace Metal Recovery from Deep-Sea Ferromanganese Deposits. International Marine Minerals Society, 2017.

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