Process Evaluation and Flowsheet Development for the Recovery of Rare Earth Elements from Coal and Associated By-Products

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
R. Q. Honaker J. Groppo A. Noble J. Herbst
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
9
File Size:
503 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2017

Abstract

"Coal and coal byproducts produced annually contain a sufficient amount of rare earth elements (REEs) to meet current U.S. demand. The REEs exist in the form of minerals, ion-adsorbed elements associated with clays, and chemically bonded elements within the organic coal matrix or host mineral. Researchers at three universities collaborated to evaluate the effectiveness of existing physical and chemical concentration processes for the recovery of the REEs. The efforts found that physical separation processes can increase the total REE content in the thickener underflow material collected from a Central Appalachian coal cleaning facility from around 300 ppm to values greater than 17,500 ppm on an ash basis. Leaching followed by solvent extraction was found to be the most effective to recover the REEs from coarse middlings materials collected from multiple coal basins, as indicated by recovery values exceeding 80 percent. Based on material characterization data and process evaluations conducted for several potential feed coal sources, economic recovery of the REEs will require byproduct production of both clean coal and REE concentrate using a process flowsheet that is unique for each source. IntroductionRecent studies initiated by the National Energy Technology Laboratory showed that U.S. coals contain significant amounts of rare earth elements (REEs), suggesting that rare earth minerals (REMs) and/or REEs can be produced as byproducts (Ekmann, 2012). According to the report, the richest source of REEs is the Central Appalachian coal. At present, there are 208 coal preparation plants located in the region consisting of areas within the states of West Virginia, Kentucky, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Alabama and Tennessee, with a total capacity of 166,495 t/h, or more than 1 Gt/y (Fiscor, 2014). If only a portion of these plants are retrofitted with advanced separation processes, the U.S. coal industry would become a significant producer of REE concentrates as byproducts. An inherent advantage of becoming a byproduct producer of REEs is that no mining cost needs to be part of the production cost."
Citation

APA: R. Q. Honaker J. Groppo A. Noble J. Herbst  (2017)  Process Evaluation and Flowsheet Development for the Recovery of Rare Earth Elements from Coal and Associated By-Products

MLA: R. Q. Honaker J. Groppo A. Noble J. Herbst Process Evaluation and Flowsheet Development for the Recovery of Rare Earth Elements from Coal and Associated By-Products. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2017.

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