Abstract

The recovery of cerium (and possibly other rare earth elements) from the spent glass-polishing slurries is rather difficult because of a high resistance of polishing-grade cerium oxide toward common digestion agents. It was shown that cerium may be extracted from the spent polishing slurries by leaching with strong mineral acids in the presence of reducing agents; the solution may be used directly for the preparation of a ceria-based reactive sorbent. A mixture of concentrated nitric acid and hydrogen peroxide was effective in the digestion of partially dewatered glass-polishing slurry. After the removal of undissolved particles, cerous carbonate was precipitated by gaseous NH3and CO2. Cerium oxide was prepared by a thermal decomposition of the carbonate precursor in an open crucible and tested as reactive sorbent for the degradation of highly toxic organophosphate compounds. The samples annealed at the optimal temperature of approximately 400°C exhibited a good degradation efficiency toward the organophosphate pesticide fenchlorphos and the nerve agents soman and VX. The extraction/precipitation procedure recovers approximately 70% of cerium oxide from the spent polishing slurry. The presence of minor amounts of lanthanum does not disturb the degradation efficiency.

Highlights

  • Because of its superior glass-polishing ability, cerium oxide is consumed in great quantities in manufacturing precise optics and other branches of the glass industry [1]

  • As a result of mechanical crushing and chemical reactions, which both participate in the glasspolishing process [1, 2], the polishing agents gradually lose their efficiency and must be replaced, whereas the spent polishing sludge is discarded without further exploitation

  • In our previous work [7], we demonstrated that cerium oxide prepared by thermal decomposition of cerous carbonate may serve as an effective reactive sorbent capable of destroying highly toxic organophosphate compounds in minutes

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Summary

Introduction

Because of its superior glass-polishing ability, cerium oxide is consumed in great quantities in manufacturing precise optics and other branches of the glass industry [1]. In our previous work [7], we demonstrated that cerium oxide prepared by thermal decomposition of cerous carbonate may serve as an effective reactive sorbent capable of destroying highly toxic organophosphate compounds in minutes.

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