Abstract

In this study, the mineralogy of a novel resource of deep-sea sediments containing rare earth elements (REEs) was investigated, along with the leaching of REEs using hydrochloric acid. The results revealed that, apart from 62.0% of the Ce found in the Mn oxides, the other REEs in the deep-sea sediments mostly existed in hydroxyapatite mineral which can be easily decomposed via a hydrochloric acid leaching. An optimized REEs leaching percentage of 89.5% was achieved using 2.0 mol/L hydrochloric acid as the leaching agent, with a liquid-solid ratio of 4:1, at 60 °C for 30 min. However, Mn oxides remained stable during the leaching process, resulting in a low Ce leaching percentage of 30.7%. Under the optimized conditions, Mn oxides could be decomposed by adding 30% H2O2 as a reducing agent, leading to improved leaching percentages of Ce and REEs to 86.6% and 93.2%, respectively. The high leaching efficiency of REEs may further increase the utilization potential of this novel resource.

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