Abstract

Garlic peel (GP) was chemically modified by using thiourea under hydrothermal treatment, which could selectively adsorb gold ions from the 1/10 dilute aqua regia media directly without needing the dangerous evaporation operation. The synthetic chloroauric solution and practical leach liquor of the waste PCB (printed circuit board) powder in dilute aqua regia were employed to assess the adsorption performance on the thiol-GP and the commercial quaternary ammonia anion resin of D201, respectively. It was experimentally confirmed that the adsorption efficiency of gold onto the thiol-GP and D201 resin both reached 100%, and the maximum adsorption capacity of thiol-GP gel was evaluated as 42.59mg Au/g that was much larger than that of D201 resin (3.33mg Au/g). The thiol-GP gel adsorption efficiency of other coexisting base metal ions like Cu2+, Ni2+, Al3+, and Fe3+ from dilute aqua regia leach liquor of the waste PCB powder was near zero, and only gold could be enriched by selective adsorption onto the thiol-GP gel. At least 3 cycles of adsorption/elution could be obtained without decreasing the adsorption efficiency drastically. The adsorbed gold on the thiol-GP was able to be eluted effectively by using the mixture solution of 0.1M thiourea and 0.1M hydrochloric acid, and finally the solid gold could be recovered by sodium borohydride through a reduction process. This study demonstrated a green, environmentally friendly, low-cost, and efficient method for selective recovery of gold from the dilute leach liquor (aqua regia) of waste circuit boards.

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