Abstract

Recycling activity for waste electrical and electronic equipment is always accompanied with leaching solution containing copper. Its selective extraction is of environmental and economic significance, and is beneficial for subsequent resource purification procedure. Compared with techniques such as chemical precipitation and solvent extraction, potentiostatic electrodeposition is outstanding with the advantage of high selectivity, electron as clean reagent, and minimal chemical usage. However, key factors affecting copper electrodeposition behavior as well as its kinetic process remain unclear, which blocks its further application. In this study, selective copper electrochemical extraction from multi-metal leaching solution of waste liquid crystal display panels is explored. Copper electrodeposition is analyzed from electrochemical and mass transport point of view, and the main results are summarized: (i) copper can be first electrodeposited due to its higher reduction potential compared with indium; (ii) applied potential and agitation are the most influential factors towards space-time yield and current efficiency; (iii) a semi-empirical kinetic model could quantitatively describe the influence of agitation and the time-current-concentration relationship. The model-predicted extraction rate agreed well with experimental data throughout electrodeposition; (iv) electrodeposition experiments show over 95% of copper can be selectively extracted as ultrafine copper powder (~150 nm) at 0.05 V (vs. SHE).

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