A study on selective leaching of heavy metals vs. iron from fly ash

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Abstract

Incinerator plant waste streams contain underexploited metals originating from households and industrial operators. The objective was to investigate the dissolution behavior of fly ash in: 0.2–7 M HCl, 0.2–7 M H2SO4, 0.5–1 M oxalic acid, 0.5–4 M citric acid, 0.5–7 M acetic acid, water, and ethaline, at 33 °C during 24 h leaching. The capability for high metals’ extraction of Zn, Cu, Ni, Pb, and Fe and management of the heavy metal Pb through leaching or precipitation was investi-gated. Selective leaching of valuable metals vs. Fe was observed. The target was to find a sustainable leaching method and provide a basis for further development of metal recovery from fly ash. The highest Zn extraction (> 80%) was achieved with 3 M H2SO4 and 7 M HCl, which also dissolved Cu (> 87%) and Ni (> 65%). However, more dilute HCl, 0.2 M, was able to provide Zn, Cu, and Ni extractions of 43, 86, and 18%, respectively. Efficient Pb leaching was achieved in HCl—complete extraction was provided by 3 and 5 M HCl, whereas H2SO4 did not extract Pb due to PbSO4 formation; similarly, in oxalic acid, Pb precipitated as PbC2O4. Ethaline could extract 50% of Pb with high selectivity towards Fe.

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Elomaa, H., Seisko, S., Lehtola, J., & Lundström, M. (2019). A study on selective leaching of heavy metals vs. iron from fly ash. Journal of Material Cycles and Waste Management, 21(4), 1004–1013. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10163-019-00858-w

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