Rare Earth Recovery from Uranium Plant Raffinate and Operation of a Rare Earth Separation Pilot Plant

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Y. Tang
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
8
File Size:
300 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2018

Abstract

"Rare earth elements (REEs) have many key applications in traditional and advanced technologies. A shortage of several critical REEs is expected due to the discrepancy between the availability of REEs from REE deposits and the REE demand from the market. REE recovery and separation from secondary resources such as uranium wastes and recycled materials might help balance the shortfall in a cost-effective way. This paper presents data concerning the recovery of heavy REEs (HREEs) from uranium raffinate. It also discusses the design, commissioning, and operation of a solvent extraction pilot plant for the separation of REEs.RÉSUMÉ Les éléments des terres rares (ÉTR) trouvent de nombreuses applications importantes dans les technologies classiques et de pointe. On prévoit une pénurie de plusieurs ÉTR critiques en raison des divergences constatées entre la disponibilité des ÉTR provenant de gisement d’éléments des terres rares, et la demande d’ÉTR sur le marché. La récupération et la séparation des ÉTR à partir de ressources secondaires telles que les déchets générés par le traitement du minerai d’uranium et les matériaux recyclés pourraient contribuer à équilibrer cette pénurie de manière rentable. Cet article présente des données relatives à la récupération des ÉTR lourds (HREE, de l’anglais heavy REEs) à partir de raffinat d’uranium. Il aborde également la question de la conception, de la mise en service et de l’exploitation d’une usine pilote d’extraction par solvants pour la séparation des ÉTR INTRODUCTIONSignificant amounts of strategic specialty heavy rare earth elements (HREEs) are present in waste streams in Saskatchewan uranium operations. Selective precipitation including neutralization, oxalate, and double-salt precipitation, as well as sulfide precipitation, ion exchange (IX), and solvent extraction (SX) are commonly used technologies for the recovery and purification of rare earth element (REE) solutions. REE oxalate precipitation can effectively remove Fe, Al, Ca, Si, and other impurities by taking advantage of the solubility difference between REE oxalates and impurities in the acidic solution (Xu, 2005)."
Citation

APA: Y. Tang  (2018)  Rare Earth Recovery from Uranium Plant Raffinate and Operation of a Rare Earth Separation Pilot Plant

MLA: Y. Tang Rare Earth Recovery from Uranium Plant Raffinate and Operation of a Rare Earth Separation Pilot Plant. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2018.

Export
Purchase this Article for $25.00

Create a Guest account to purchase this file
- or -
Log in to your existing Guest account