Abstract
High-tech metals, including Ga, Ge and In, are critical for the performance of electrical and electronic equipment (EEE). None of these three metals exist in mineable levels in natural minerals, and thus their availability and production are dependent on the primary and secondary base metals (including Zn, Al and Cu) production. To secure the supply of high-tech metals in the future, their behavior, including distribution coefficients (LCu/s = [wt% M]in copper/(wt% M)in slag), in primary and secondary processes need to be characterized. This study reports three series of copper-slag distribution experiments for Ga, Ge and In in simulated secondary copper smelting and refining process conditions (T = 1300 °C, pO2 = 10−9–10−5 atm) using a well-developed drop–quench technique followed by EPMA and LA-ICP-MS analyses. This study shows how an analytical technique more traditionally applied to the characterization of ores or minerals can also be applied to metallurgical process investigation. The LA-ICP-MS analysis was used for the first time for measuring the concentrations of these minor elements in metallurgical glasses, i.e., slags, and the results were compared to the geological literature. The distribution coefficient of indium increased as a function of decreasing oxygen partial pressure from 0.03 to 10, whereas the distribution coefficient of gallium was 0.1 at 10−9 atm and decreased as the pO2 increased. The concentrations of gallium in slags were between 0.4 and 0.6 wt% and germanium around 1 ppm. Germanium was vaporized almost entirely from the samples.
Highlights
Today’s industrialized world is dependent on advanced technology
The copper phase was analyzed only with EPMA, whereas the slags were analyzed with EPMA and LA-ICP-MS employing two different external standards (NIST 610 and 612 SRM)
The distribution coefficient of indium was highly dependent on the oxygen partial pressure: in reducing conditions indium dissolves more into black copper, but after the converting stage it is mainly oxidized into the slag
Summary
Today’s industrialized world is dependent on advanced technology. The increase in wealth and well-being of people is largely achieved by spreading and developing technology and technical innovations. New and specialized properties in electronic equipment (EEE), including artificial intelligence (AI) and improved processing capabilities, require sustainable and sophistically tailored material solutions. This means that new materials and precious as well as rare elements are employed in increasing quantities to fulfill the demand on the range of metal alloy properties in EEE. Primary ore resources are becoming depleted, and new metal sources must be found. This has created a need to improve and develop recycling and recovery processes of critical metals from obsolete EEE and other wastes. Studies investigating critical element contents in WEEE (Waste EEE)
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