A facile process for the efficient extraction of vanadium from vanadium slag via iron (III) oxide–assisted mechanochemical activation coupled with alkaline leaching

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Zhiqiang Lui - , CAS - Institute of Process Engineering, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, TUD Dresden University of Technology (Author)
  • Yeqing Lv - , CAS - Institute of Process Engineering (Author)
  • Shaona Wang - , CAS - Institute of Process Engineering (Author)
  • Biao Liu - , CAS - Institute of Process Engineering (Author)
  • Marco Wenzel - , Chair of Inorganic Molecular Chemistry (Author)
  • Yi Zhang - , CAS - Institute of Process Engineering (Author)
  • Hao Du - , CAS - Institute of Process Engineering, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences (Author)
  • Jan J. Weigand - , Chair of Inorganic Molecular Chemistry (Author)

Abstract

This study presents a novel and straightforward process for extracting vanadium from vanadium slag via an iron (III) oxide–assisted mechanochemical activation, designed to overcome the drawbacks of conventional roasting-leaching methods. The mechanochemically activated vanadium slag showed significantly higher vanadium leaching efficiency of 98.1 % under atmospheric pressure compared to the non-mechanochemically activated slag, which achieved 72.7 %. This improvement in leaching efficiency can be primarily attributed to the formation of grain refinement, lattice distortions, and increased chemical reactivity of vanadium slag. Additionally, the mechanochemical activation reduced particle size and increased the specific surface area, thereby exposing more of the vanadium-containing phase and enhancing surface free energy. Importantly, pre-oxidation of vanadium was facilitated by the generation of reactive oxygen species during mechanochemical processing, coupled with the presence of the iron (III) oxide. These changes in physiochemical properties and structure of the slag improve the interface reactivity, leading to a marked increase in vanadium leaching efficiency in alkaline solutions. Moreover, the iron (III) oxide can be replaced with vanadium tailings waste, achieving similar vanadium leaching efficiencies. This study introduces a novel method for vanadium extracting through a waste management approach using mechanochemical activation, offering a promising alternative for the environmentally responsible treatment of vanadium slag.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Article number127484
Number of pages11
JournalSeparation and Purification Technology
Volume347
Publication statusPublished - 21 Apr 2024
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

Scopus 85190954711
ORCID /0000-0001-7323-7816/work/160953580
Mendeley c3bf4ef3-21e1-3584-9561-5fcaaaa46efa

Keywords

Keywords

  • Iron (III) oxide, Mechanochemical activation, Reactive oxygen species, Vanadium extraction