Abstract

Excessive consumption of mobile phones, a decrease in their life time and, therefore, an increase in the generation of this type of electronic scrap, is noted in recent years. Printed circuit boards (PCB's) from waste cell phones are attractive resources because of the valuable metals Cu, Au, Ag, Pd they possess, but at the same time dangerous due to their content of heavy metals. The treatment of these boards is desirable from an economic and environmental perspective.In this paper we inform the results achieved on laboratory leaching of gold contained in PCB's from cell phones. The reagents used were ammonium thiosulfate in basic medium and thiourea in sulfuric acid solution. Prior to gold leaching, the plates were subjected to grinding to reduce their size to less than 2mm and to an oxidizing leaching in sulfuric acid solution to separate the copper. The conditions studied in the leaching test were: thiosulfate molar concentration between 0.08M and 0.12M and ammonium hydroxide from 0.1M to 0.2M, temperature of 20° C, pH = 10.5 and 15mM of cupric ion. In thiourea leaching, gold dissolution was studied by varying the concentration of the reagent between 20g/l to 28g/l. The results indicate that, under the conditions studied, ammonium thiosulfate is a more effective reagent for the dissolution of gold than thiourea. The gold dissolution values achieved were up 70% for thiosulfate and no greater than 40% for thiourea.

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