Stijn
Raiguel
,
Wim
Dehaen
and
Koen
Binnemans
*
KU Leuven, Department of Chemistry, Celestijnenlaan 200F, P.O. box 2404, B-3001 Leuven, Belgium. E-mail: Koen.Binnemans@kuleuven.be
First published on 21st February 2020
Two 1,2,3-triazolium ionic liquid diluents were evaluated for the extraction of gallium from spent Bayer process liquor by Kelex® 100. The first of these is a hydrophobic ionic liquid with a low water content, which allows the extraction of gallium directly from untreated Bayer process liquor. The second is based on a hydrophilic ionic liquid and which forms an aqueous biphasic system with concentrated salt solutions. The aqueous biphasic system homogenizes upon cooling, which allows homogeneous liquid–liquid extraction of gallium from carbonated Bayer process liquors. The influence of the ionic liquids on the extraction kinetics, mechanism, thermodynamics and selectivity is investigated. Stripping was examined from both systems and their potential for industrialization is discussed. Ionic liquids are shown to beneficially influence the extraction process from thermodynamic and kinetic perspectives. They are therefore promising to solve the issues which have thus far prevented the industrial application of resource-efficient solvent extraction techniques for the recovery of gallium from spent Bayer process liquor.
Gallium does not readily form minerals in which it is a major constituent. Consequently, it is only obtained as a by-product from the processing of other raw materials.3,4 Three major, exploitable sources of gallium are generally recognized: (1) bauxite residues, (2) zinc ores and (3) coal deposits. Coal deposits comprise the largest gallium reserves, but gallium can only be recovered from fly ash after combustion due to the very low concentration of gallium in most coal deposits.3,5 Gallium-enriched zinc refinery residues contain residual zinc in the form of zinc ferrite, in which gallium may be present by substitution.4 After leaching of the residue with sulfuric acid, solvent extraction is generally used to recover gallium from the leachate.6 This source only contributes to about 10% of worldwide gallium production. Most gallium is instead obtained from bauxite.3
Bauxite is the major ore for aluminum production, and mainly consists of aluminum hydroxides and oxide-hydroxides, iron oxides and oxide-hydroxides, clay minerals, silicon dioxide and titanium dioxide, often in various polymorphic mineral phases.7,8 The concentration of gallium in bauxite ranges from below 10 ppm to over 800 ppm, with an average concentration of 57 ppm.9 Actual production of aluminum is preceded by the production of alumina in the Bayer process. Herein, bauxite is digested by a concentrated sodium hydroxide solution at elevated temperatures. The resulting slurry is then separated from the residual gangue solids, cooled and seeded with aluminum hydroxide crystals to induce precipitation of the dissolved sodium aluminate as aluminum hydroxide.10 The caustic liquor is recycled after precipitation, but over time impurities tend to accumulate, including organics, inorganic anions, silica, vanadium and gallium.10–12 This leads to a reduction in precipitation yield, contamination of the product and a reduction of the quality of the final product's morphology and crystallinity.12 Final gallium concentrations in spent Bayer liquor are between 0.1–0.3 g L−1, but residual aluminum concentrations are around 50 g L−1, making the selective recovery of gallium highly challenging.13
Gallium has been recovered on an industrial scale from such spent, impurity-rich Bayer process liquor by a number of different methods, including fractional precipitation, electrolysis, cementation and ion exchange with amidoxime-functionalized resins.14 Of these methods, ion exchange is currently considered the most effective, resulting in it being the most widely applied.14 These resins are highly selective for gallium over aluminum and exhibit high affinities and loading capacities.15 As a result, gallium recovery yields are high and little aluminum is lost from the Bayer process.14 However, stripping of the resins takes place in acidic media and the gallium-binding amidoxime groups are not stable with respect to hydrolysis under acidic conditions, with carboxylic acids and hydroxamic acids as possible decomposition products.14,16 Consequently, the resins slowly degrade under stripping and regeneration conditions, resulting in a loss of gallium binding capacity.15,16 The resins also bind tightly to vanadium, poisoning the resin due to the progressive occupation of binding sites.15,17 Adsorbed vanadium can be removed by scrubbing with highly concentrated sodium hydroxide (9 mol L−1), but this process is slow and not all vanadium can be scrubbed.15 Moreover, the production of aqueous waste by adsorption processes in column setup is substantial.15,18
From the late 1970s to the early 1990s, considerable interest had arisen in an alternative technique for sequestering gallium from spent Bayer process liquor: solvent extraction.13,19–22 Gallium was found to be preferentially extracted over aluminum by 7-(4-ethyl-1-methyloctyl)-8-hydroxyquinoline (better known under the commercial name Kelex® 100, Fig. 1), usually dissolved in kerosene and modified with 10 vol% 1-decanol. Solvent extraction seemed to offer the prospect of a simple process, the consumption of relatively small quantities of reagents and a very limited impact on the Bayer process itself, as the Bayer process liquor is not decomposed by the extraction process itself.14 In practice, however, the extraction process turned out to be impractically slow, and as a consequence it was never employed on an industrial scale.13,14,19 The use of surfactant-stabilized microemulsions or ultrasonic agitation were proposed in order to enhance extraction kinetics.21,23–26 Puvvada observed a decrease in the required equilibration time by factor of 10 upon addition of Versatic Acid 10 to the organic phase, but the system exhibited poor reusability.25 Systems with Kelex® 100 dissolved in n-butanol as organic phase form stable microemulsions and exhibit very strong, relatively rapid extraction of gallium.23,26 Unfortunately, these systems exhibit poor selectivity of gallium over aluminum.26 Pesic and Zhou observed a 10- to 20-fold increase of the extraction rate constant by applying ultrasonic agitation during extraction, but this technique has not been applied industrially.21
The extraction mechanism of gallium by Kelex® 100 and the cause of these poor kinetics have been the subject of previous studies. By carefully studying the parameters affecting the extraction equilibrium, Sato and Oishi established the net extraction mechanism to be that shown in eqn (1):20
(1) |
Overbars denote organic phase species and HK100 denotes the acidic (uncharged) form of Kelex® 100. Sato and Oishi hereby affirmed earlier hypotheses concerning the extraction mechanism of gallium.13 In this earlier work it was also hypothesized that aluminum is extracted analogously and sodium is extracted via a neutralization reaction (eqn (2)):
(2) |
Sato and Oishi further observed that, at high hydroxide concentrations pertinent in spent Bayer process liquors, the extraction rate constant is of inverse first order with respect to the hydroxide concentration, implying that the extraction rate is limited by the loss of a hydroxide ligand to form an intermediate trihydroxo complex.20 Indeed, the species Ga(OH)3 never predominates in aqueous solutions, and only small equilibrium concentrations are present.27 This ligand loss may be necessary due to the impossibility of stabilizing the charged Ga(OH)4− species in the apolar organic phase. A viable method of improving extraction kinetics could thus consist of designing an extraction system capable of delivering Ga(OH)4− to the extractant molecules dissolved in the organic phase, without a prerequisite, unfavorable change in inner-sphere coordination.
In this work, we present two ionic liquid-based solvent extraction systems for the selective extraction of gallium(III) from spent Bayer liquor. Two strategies are employed. The first strategy involves the use of a hydrophobic ionic liquid, in which Kelex® 100 has been dissolved, for the direct extraction of gallium(III) from untreated Bayer liquor analogous to conventional extraction using a hydrocarbon diluent. The second strategy makes use of an ionic liquid with temperature-dependent miscibility with the aqueous phase, allowing a homogeneous phase to form at upon cooling and allowing Ga(OH)4− to diffuse to the extractant molecules directly, without traversing an interfacial barrier. This type of extraction, known as homogeneous liquid–liquid extraction (HLLE), has been used to extract metal ions in several previous studies.28–34 The ionic liquids employed as diluents for these systems are both 1,2,3-triazolium ionic liquids, which were previously reported by our group to be very stable in alkaline media.35,36 From a perspective of sustainability, a solvent extraction-based process offers the advantage of a relatively low production of aqueous waste compared to adsorption-based processes in column setup.15,18 In contrast to many other techniques, solvent extraction has a fairly limited impact on the composition of the spent Bayer liquor, facilitating its recycling after gallium recovery.14 The process flowsheet is comparatively simple and little processing is required after solvent extraction.14 Moreover, the use of ionic liquids is particularly advantageous in industrial-scale solvent extraction, as this mitigates the production of large quantities of fumes related to the use of volatile organic solvents. In addition, the low volatility and intrinsic conductivity of ionic liquids both work to prevent fires related to sparking after the buildup of static electricity, which commonly occurs in conventional solvent extraction due to the intensive handling of non-conducting liquids.37
The analysis of samples with known concentrations, prepared by making appropriate dilutions of standard solutions of gallium and aluminum using the procedures discussed above, allowed us to make an estimate of the combined error on sample preparation and analysis. The median relative error was found to be about 4%. Propagation of this error leads to an estimated error of 7% on the percentage extraction and the distribution ratio for a 1:1 phase ratio.
(3) |
The distribution ratio was calculated using eqn (4):
(4) |
(5) |
In eqn (3), DX and DY represent the distribution ratios for elements X and Y, respectively. Elements X and Y are defined such that DX > DY and hence the separation factor is greater than 1 by definition.
All homogeneous liquid–liquid extraction (HLLE) experiments were preceded by presaturation of the organic phase, in order to prevent the transfer of water from the aqueous to the organic phase during extraction. This was done by dissolving 2.00 mL of ionic liquid and 100 μL of Kelex® 100 in 10.00 mL of sodium carbonate solution (1.20 mol L−1) and heating this mixture to a temperature arbitrarily set at 80 °C, sufficiently high above the cloud point temperature to obtain a stable final phase ratio. The final aqueous salt concentration could be estimated at about 1.7 mol L−1 from the reduction in aqueous phase volume (determined using a graduated cylinder, with an error of approximately 1%). The organic phase resulting from this procedure is thus at equilibrium with a 1.7 mol L−1 solution of sodium carbonate at 80 °C, and has a Kelex® 100 concentration of 5 vol% with respect to the total organic component. Therefore, the aqueous sodium carbonate concentration was kept at 1.7 mol L−1 for all HLLE experiments. The resulting extraction systems have cloud point temperatures close to room temperature. The concentration of gallium and aluminum in the aqueous phase was 200 ppm each. In mechanistic studies, only the metal being investigated was present in the aqueous phase.
HLLE experiments were performed in 4 mL glass vials equipped with magnetic stirring bars. The samples were homogenized for 10 minutes (unless stated otherwise) using an ice bath under magnetic stirring at 500 rpm. Phases were separated by reheating to 80 °C, followed by centrifuging at 5000 rpm for 2 min using a Heraeus Labufuge 200 centrifuge. When no precipitation occurred during solvent extraction, the percentage extraction and distribution ratio were determined by measuring the aqueous phase before and after extraction using eqn (3) and (4) as discussed above. When a precipitate had formed during extraction, both phases were measured after extraction in order to determine the percentage extraction and the distribution ratio using eqn (6) and (4), respectively.
(6) |
A more hydrophilic ionic liquid was required for the HLLE system. A sulfate ionic liquid with a similar cation was chosen: 4-ethyl-1,3-bis(2-ethylhexyl)-5-propyl-1,2,3-triazolium sulfate, or [EhEhT23]2[SO4]. This ionic liquid was also previously reported by our group and was found to be miscible with pure water, but immiscible with concentrated sodium hydroxide solutions.36 At intermediate electrolyte concentrations, this ionic liquid is observed to exhibit a lower critical solution temperature (LCST behavior). Dupont et al. suggested that this type of behavior can be expected from ionic liquids with large, hydrophobic cations and highly hydrated anions, as the hydration of the anion entails a favorable enthalpy term but an unfavorable entropy term.38 Therefore, demixing of aqueous solutions of such salts is entropy-driven and occurs upon heating of the mixture. When the system is in its homogeneous state, metal ions and extractant molecules diffuse freely and interfacial phenomena no longer control extraction kinetics. This forms the basis of the HLLE technique. After homogeneous extraction, the solution is reheated for phase separation.
Some preliminary solvent extraction studies were carried out from sodium hydroxide solutions in order to evaluate the feasibility of extracting gallium from untreated spent Bayer process liquor using the HLLE technique. However, extraction of gallium was very poor from these solutions.1H NMR showed that saponification of the Kelex® 100 extractant occurred at high sodium hydroxide concentrations (spectra shown in ESI, Fig. S3†). This prevents the extractant from functioning properly, as protonation of the hydroxo ligands bound to gallium is an integral part of the extraction mechanism (eqn (1)).20 HLLE from sodium hydroxide solutions was thus not investigated any further. In contrast, gallium was extracted very efficiently from carbonate solutions by Kelex® 100 diluted in [EhEhT23]2[SO4]. Therefore, [EhEhT23]2[SO4] is proposed as a diluent for the extraction of gallium(III) by Kelex® 100 from carbonated Bayer process liquor, rather than untreated Bayer process liquor. Carbonation is a process in which CO2 is injected in the Bayer liquor in order to reduce the pH and partly precipitate the aluminum present in the solution.14 This process converts most of the sodium hydroxide in solution to sodium carbonate. As a result of the carbonation, the Ga/Al ratio in the liquor increases and the solvent extraction of gallium(III) becomes possible using [EhEhT23]2[SO4] in a HLLE process. As mentioned above, carbonation is not required if the more hydrophobic [HHT12][Tf2N] is used as diluent, as the extractant does not saponify in this ionic liquid even under highly alkaline conditions. The decrease of the pKa of the extractant in [EhEhT23]2[SO4] can be attributed to the high water content of the ionic-liquid rich phase, even after demixing, facilitating the stabilization of charged species.
Fig. 3 Variation of cloud point temperature of [EhEhT23]2[SO4] and sodium hydroxide solutions with the composition of the mixture. |
Fig. 4 Variation of cloud point temperature of [EhEhT23]2[SO4] and sodium carbonate solutions with the composition of the mixture. |
Aqueous solutions of sodium hydroxide (1.500 mol L−1 or 1.750 mol L−1) and sodium carbonate (1.200 mol L−1) were used in constructing phase diagrams with ionic liquid-Kelex® 100 mixtures. Lower sodium carbonate concentrations are required to induce phase separation than those required for sodium hydroxide. This stronger salting-out effect can be attributed both to the high charge of the carbonate anion and the release of two equivalents of sodium cations by sodium carbonate upon dissolution. Two concentrations of Kelex® 100 were evaluated: one corresponding to a 200:10 volume fraction at 22 °C, and one corresponding to a 200:15 volume fraction. These are equivalent to mole fractions of 0.124 and 0.175, respectively. As Kelex® 100 is poorly soluble in pure water, one may intuitively predict that increasing its concentration in an aqueous biphasic system increases the cloud point temperature of the system. Hence, lower sodium hydroxide concentrations are required to obtain a thermomorphic system when using higher extractant concentrations. The system containing Kelex® 100 in 0.175 molar ratio with the ionic liquid is only thermomorphic with sodium carbonate (1.200 mol L−1) over a limited composition range, as Kelex® 100 becomes insoluble in the homogeneous phase at higher values of χm,aq. Transferring these data to solvent extraction systems is not straightforward, as mutual miscibility of the phases results in a transfer of a large quantity of water from the aqueous phase to the organic phase. In the Experimental section, more details are given concerning the method used to obtain a constant phase ratio throughout the extraction process.
(7) |
Q denotes the ionic liquid cation in eqn (7). The mechanism in hydrocarbon diluents, which was already mentioned above, proceeds as shown in eqn (8).
(8) |
In both equations, overbars denote organic phase species and HK100 denotes the acidic (uncharged) form of Kelex® 100.
The usual mechanism shown in eqn (8) is characterized by the release of a hydroxide anion into the aqueous phase. This results in a pH-dependence of gallium extraction. Increasing the pH should suppress gallium extraction, rather than enhancing it as is generally the case for acidic extractants. The pH dependence of extraction was evaluated by varying the equilibrium pH of the aqueous phase. This was accomplished by the addition of various concentrations of NaOH to the feed solution, between 0 and 50 mmol L−1. Note that the potentiometrically determined pH values reflect proton activity, rather than proton concentration. A linear relationship was observed between the logarithm of the distribution ratio (log(DGa)) and the pH, with a slope of close to −1. Bearing in mind the relationship shown in eqn (9),
pH = 14 − pOH = 14 + log[OH−]. | (9) |
It can be inferred that hydroxide anions are expelled to the aqueous phase upon gallium extraction with 1:1 stoichiometry. A plot of the obtained extraction results is shown in the ESI (Fig. S4†).
A similar strategy was used to evaluate the involvement of sulfate anions in the interfacial exchange mechanism. A series of extractions were performed from solutions containing 1.7 mol L−1 sodium carbonate using 0.124 mol mol−1 Kelex® 100 in [EhEhT23]2[SO4] in a 1:2 phase volume ratio (organic to aqueous). The composition of the aqueous phase was varied by the addition of various concentrations of Na2SO4 to the feed solution. The sulfate concentration was hereby varied between 0.001 and 200 mmol L−1. Extraction was found to be nearly independent of the sulfate concentration, strongly suggesting that sulfate anions are not involved in maintaining charge neutrality of the phases upon extraction. This result also suggests that the mechanism is unaltered by the use of ionic liquids as diluents. A plot of the obtained extraction results is shown in the ESI (Fig. S5†).
Intuitively, one expects the HLLE system to reach equilibrium much more quickly than the biphasic systems. Fig. 5 shows that the benchmark system takes about 2 hours to reach equilibrium for gallium extraction under the conditions evaluated here. While the triazolium HLLE system did outperform the benchmark kerosene system, both ionic liquid systems reached equilibrium for gallium extraction within 5 minutes. Thus, significant improvements in the gallium extraction kinetics can be obtained by using an ionic liquid as diluent, regardless of thermomorphic behavior. These results appear to indicate a kinetic advantage inherent to the use of ionic liquids as diluents. Note that the extraction of aluminum by the HLLE system is not shown in Fig. 5 as aluminum partially precipitates during extraction. This is discussed further below.
Similar experiments were performed on the non-HLLE ionic liquid system with [HHT12][Tf2N] as diluent. In this case, extractions are performed from sodium hydroxide medium (2.000 mol L−1). The stirring speed was 1200 rpm at a temperature of 22 °C. As is evident from Fig. 6, the benchmark system suffers from poor reproducibility under these conditions, which may be related to small differences in interfacial area between individual samples. The ionic liquid system, by contrast, shows a far more consistent trend as a function of time. What is clear, however, is that the ionic liquid exhibits modestly improved kinetics over the benchmark system: a percentage extraction of 75% is reached after about 15 minutes, while the benchmark system only reaches this point after about 60 minutes. Since the extraction rates of Kelex® 100 in the benchmark system are similar for both carbonate and hydroxide feed solutions, it is thus reasonable to deduce the following general trend in extraction rates by Kelex® 100: sulfate ionic liquids > bistriflimide ionic liquids > kerosene.
An elegant hypothesis to explain these findings invokes anion exchange, a process possible only in ionic liquids and which becomes more favorable with increasing hydration enthalpy of the ionic liquid anion.38 In conventional systems, gallium must lose a hydroxo ligand before traversing the interface (eqn (8)), as anions are poorly stabilized in alkanes, even with the extractant present.20 This ligand loss is very unfavorable, causing the concentration of the mobile intermediate to be very low. Thus, the rate of interfacial mass transfer is limited. The contrasting, rapid interfacial kinetics of Kelex® 100 in ionic liquid systems would, according to this hypothesis, result from the occurrence of the reaction described by eqn (10) as rate determining step.
(10) |
Overbars in eqn (10) represent organic phase species. While this equilibrium is unfavorable (sulfate ionic liquids without Kelex® 100 do not extract gallium from alkaline solutions), it does provide a mechanism by which gallium can transverse the interface without any changes in inner-sphere coordination. The bistriflimide anion has a lower hydration enthalpy than the sulfate anion, and as a result, the analogous process is less favorable for ionic liquids containing this anion, which would then explain the intermediate extraction rates of these ionic liquids.
If this hypothesis is indeed valid, the addition of a catalytic amount (5 vol%) of [EhEhT23]2[SO4] to the organic phase of the bistriflimide ionic liquid system should induce rapid kinetics, similar to pure sulfate ionic liquids. However, this addition was found to have no positive influence on the extraction kinetics. Hence, the cause of the rapid kinetics of the sulfate ionic liquid systems should be sought elsewhere. We propose that the high water content of sulfate ionic liquids allows the Na+–Ga(OH)4− ion pairs to diffuse into the organic phase. Earlier authors have concluded that water tends to form polar microphases in the bulk structure of ionic liquids, through which charged solutes may rapidly diffuse and in which they can be solvated.42,43 The water content of the bistriflimide ionic liquid is lower (0.51% at saturation35), reducing the solubility of ion pairs in the organic phase and reducing their mobility.
In the homogeneous extaction system, the ionic liquid, extractant and gallate(III) anions diffuse freely in the same phase, and an interfacial exchange mechanism is no longer needed. However, since extraction is very rapid to Kelex® 100 in sulfate ionic liquids, the added energy expenditure to perform the HLLE procedure may not be justified. A more energy-efficient solution to using Kelex® 100 dissolved in [EhEhT23]2[SO4] may thus be to select a sufficiently high extractant or salt concentration such that the system is biphasic under all operating conditions.
The non-HLLE (bistriflimide) system is compatible with the high alkalinities of untreated spent Bayer liquor. The pH is not buffered and all processes are subject to the strong variations in ionic strength resulting from the highly variable NaOH concentrations. Hence, strong variations on the selectivity of gallium over aluminum are to be expected depending on the alkalinity of the feed solution. To examine the extraction of both elements as a function of the alkalinity, extractions were performed from solutions with sodium hydroxide concentrations ranging from 1.000 to 5.000 mol L−1. A phase volume ratio of 1:2 (organic to aqueous) was used at 25 °C. Fig. 7 shows that large variations occur both in the distribution ratio of gallium and the selectivity factor αGa/Al. The latter varies by two orders of magnitude, although the range of hydroxide concentrations corresponds to less than one formal pH unit. This variation is large even accounting for variations in ionic strength. It is thus likely that saponification of the extractant contributes to the loss of affinity for gallium.
The positive slope of the natural logarithm of the equilibrium constant as a function of the reciprocal temperature indicates a suppression of the extraction performance with increasing temperature. This means that the extraction is enthalpy-driven and that the entropy of extraction is unfavorable. From the value of the slope and the intercept of linear regressions of the data, numerical values of ΔexH and ΔexS can be found for both the non-HLLE ionic liquid system and the kerosene system. For the ionic liquid system, ΔexH = (−77.4 ± 3.3) kJ mol−1 and ΔexS = (−164 ± 10) J mol−1 K−1. For the kerosene system, ΔexH = (−65.8 ± 1.2) kJ mol−1 and ΔexS = (−171 ± 4) J mol−1 K−1. The given standard errors are those on the linear regression. The enthalpic contribution is significantly more favorable in the ionic liquid system. The entropic contribution is slightly more favorable, although this is within the experimental error.
The value of ΔexH is 11.6 kJ mol−1 more favorable in the non-HLLE ionic liquid system than the kerosene system. This is somewhat surprising, as one may expect the more polar ionic liquid to diminish the coordinating ability of the Kelex® 100 ligand by solvating the electron-donating sites. However, Kelex® 100, like many acidic extractants, contains both hydrogen bond donor and acceptor sites in its structure and is thus subject to dimerization in the organic phase.45 The necessity to separate these dimers may account for the less favorable enthalpy of extraction in the kerosene system. The value of 11.6 kJ mol−1 corresponds well with the strength of 3 weak hydrogen bonds (one per extractant molecule). Moreover, this hypothesis is supported by 1H NMR measurements. The aromatic spectral region of Kelex® 100 in the kerosene system strongly resembles that of Kelex® 100 in chloroform-d. The corresponding region of the spectrum of Kelex® 100 in the ionic liquid system, on the other hand, is characterized by an upfield shift of the ortho-proton on the pyridinic ring (position 2) by about 0.45 ppm relative to the para-proton (position 4), indicative of an increased electron density near the ring nitrogen atom. As the phenolic ring is substituted in the ortho-position, no such comparison can be made for the ortho-proton. However, the para-proton of the phenolic ring (position 5) is shifted upfield by about 0.2 ppm relative to the reference proton on the pydridinic ring, indicating that the Kelex® 100 ligand is also subject to interactions other than hydrogen bonding in the ionic liquid. For instance, π–π interactions between the electron-rich phenolic ring and the electron-poor triazolium cation may give rise to the upfield shift of the para-proton on the phenolic ring while also explaining why the observed difference in ΔexH is at the weak end of the scale for hydrogen bonds. A summary of the NMR results are shown in Table 1, while the full spectra can be viewed in the ESI (Fig. S9†). Note that the signals in the ionic liquid system are broadened due to the viscosity of the ionic liquid, which reduces the mobility of solutes.
Unfortunately, this scrubbing and stripping procedure is incompatible with the HLLE (sulfate) system. Firstly, the sulfate and hydrogen sulfate anions are readily displaced by chloride anions from the aqueous phase.38,46 Secondly, acidic media cause the protonation of sulfate anions to hydrogen sulfate anions. An alternative stripping method was devised, based on the controlled saponification of the extractant. Herein the loaded organic phase is contacted with a sodium hydroxide solution. Extracted metal ions are released by driving the equilibrium described by eqn (8) to the left as a result of the high hydroxide concentration and the saponification of the acidic form of Kelex® 100 (HK100). The organic phase was first loaded from 200 ppm metal solutions and subsequently contacted with solutions containing various sodium hydroxide concentrations at 0 °C. The phases were separated by heating to 80 °C. Note that volume ratios changed during the course of the extraction, and therefore only distribution ratios are reported. Sodium hydroxide concentrations below 2.25 mol L−1 did not yield biphasic systems at 80 °C. Fig. 9 shows that sodium hydroxide is effective at reducing distribution ratios of both gallium and aluminum. With increasing sodium hydroxide concentration, the distribution ratios are further lowered. The method is not selective and both gallium and aluminum are stripped together. Furthermore, several contacts will be necessary to remove all gallium from the organic phase. A fraction of both gallium and aluminum was found to precipitate during stripping, corresponding to about 8% of the gallium in the initial feed solution and 30% of the initial aluminum. As a result, some gallium is not recovered, but the remainder is purified further, to a final purity of 88–90 wt% in the aqueous phase. To regenerate the extractant after stripping, we propose the use of ammonium sulfate solutions, which are sufficiently acidic to protonate the extractant, but not to protonate or exchange the sulfate anion in the organic phase.
Both the kinetics of extraction and the performance over successive extraction/stripping cycles were considered. The latter was investigated by subjecting a 2.5 mL sample of [HHT12][Tf2N] containing 5 vol% Kelex® 100 and modified with 10 vol% 1-decanol to alternating cycles of extraction from simulated Bayer liquor (2.5 mL) and stripping using 1 mol L−1 hydrochloric acid (2.5 mL). Experiments were carried out at 22 °C in 10 mL glass screwcap vials under magnetic stirring at 1200 rpm using a 15 × 4.5 mm stirring bar. Equilibration times of 6 hours were used for extraction and 30 minutes for stripping.
The distribution ratio for gallium obtained after 6 hours of contact on the first extraction cycle is fairly low at only 1.40 (Fig. 10). In subsequent extraction cycles, distribution ratio is over an order of magnitude greater, at values up to 16.92. The percentage extraction remains stable over at least three successive cycles (93–94%). Stripping thus induces a chemical change in the organic phase which either results in more rapid or more complete extraction of gallium. This change is most likely to be the protonation of Kelex® 100 by hydrochloric acid, converting it to its hydrochloride form, a process which also occurs during selective scrubbing (vide supra).
In an identical setup, the extraction kinetics of both the kerosene and [HHT12][Tf2N] systems were evaluated after presaturation with either 2 mol L−1 sodium hydroxide or 1 mol L−1 HCl. In the samples equilibrated with sodium hydroxide, kinetics were slow both for both the ionic liquid system and in kerosene system (Fig. 11). In contrast to the results obtained for low aluminum concentrations (vide supra), the kerosene system is more selective than the ionic liquid system at high aluminum/gallium ratios. This difference in sensitivity to the aluminum concentration may result from differences in the extraction pathway, dependent on the nature of the diluent. As was evident from the results obtained from Sato and Oishi, mass transfer in the kerosene system is limited by the equilibrium concentrations of the neutral species Ga(OH)3 and Al(OH)3, which remain low even at high alumina concentrations.20 In the ionic liquid system, anionic hydroxometalate complexes can enter the organic phase without a prerequisite ligand loss. Due to the great excess of aluminate ions with respect to gallate(III) ions, the extraction of aluminum will initially be much more rapid than that of gallium. Saturation of the extractant with aluminum thus implies that gallium can only be extracted by metal exchange, which appears to be a slower process. In light of this reasoning, the lower selectivity observed for the ionic liquid system may in fact be a kinetic effect resulting from a progressively decreasing concentration of free extractant molecules, which slows gallium extraction and prevents the system from reaching thermodynamic equilibrium.
This reasoning is corroborated by the kinetic results of the HCl-saturated systems, shown in Fig. 12. Under these conditions, the ionic liquid system reaches a percentage extraction of 88% after 60 min. Extraction of gallium is thus not only faster, but more complete, which corresponds to an apparent higher selectivity over aluminum. However, at full thermodynamic equilibrium, the HCl extracted to the organic phase will be neutralized by the much higher sodium hydroxide concentration in the aqueous phase, which results in similar equilibrium conditions to those of the system presaturated with sodium hydroxide solution (taking into account the concentration of the extractant in the organic phase, the aqueous sodium hydroxide concentration will be reduced to approximately 1.85 mol L−1, and a NaCl concentration of 0.15 mol L−1 will be present). Hence, the equilibrium distribution of gallium should be similar after either sodium hydroxide or hydrochloric acid presaturation. The presence of HCl thus likely has a catalytic effect on the extraction process. Unfortunately, full kinetic results of the kerosene system presaturated with hydrochloric acid could not be obtained, due to poor phase separation resulting from the surface activity of Kelex® 100 hydrochloride. No such problems occurred for the ionic liquid system, which is an advantage for the application of the ionic liquid systems in industrial setting. However, the data obtained after a contact time of 5 minutes do suggest that the extraction kinetics of the ionic liquid system are significantly faster after equilibration with HCl than those of the kerosene system.
The nature of the catalytic effect of extracted HCl was further investigated by performing a similar kinetic assay after presaturation of the organic phase with 1 mol L−1 hydrogen bistriflimide (HTf2N), the conjugate acid of the bistriflimide anion. This anion is poorly hydrated and thus exhibits little propensity to anion exchange.38 Other experimental parameters were kept unchanged. The results demonstrate that hydrogen bistriflimide exhibits a similar catalytic effect to HCl (Fig. 12). This eliminates any anion-related effects as potential mechanisms of catalysis. Furthermore, both the kerosene system and the ionic liquid system are affected by the catalytic effect. As the kinetics of the kerosene system are limited by the availability of kerosene-soluble metal complexes in the aqueous phase, the catalytic effect is likely either related to the accumulation of the extractant at the interface (effectively allowing aqueous phase species to interact with the extractant directly) or the influence of the aqueous phase speciation by local pH changes near the interface.
Kelex® 100 diluted in the hydrophobic ionic liquid [HHT23][Tf2N] and modified with 1-decanol is capable of selectively extracting gallium from untreated Bayer process liquor analogously to the conventional kerosene system. The ionic liquid is advantageous over the kerosene system in that it (1) exhibits more rapid equilibration; (2) binds gallium with a higher enthalpy of extraction; (3) improves phase disengagement and (4) avoids the use of volatile and flammable organic solvents. Compared to the ion exchange system in current industrial use, the system exhibits better long-term stability and lower waste production. The system performs optimally when the aqueous sodium hydroxide concentration is 2 mol L−1, at which the system is highly selective (αGa/Al ≈1000) and a distribution ratio of nearly 1000 is reached for gallium at low aluminum concentrations. Scrubbing of aluminum can be performed using hydrochloric acid solutions of over 3 mol L−1 while solutions of under 1 mol L−1 can be used for the stripping of gallium. When extracting from feed solutions containing high concentrations of aluminum, residual acid remaining in the organic phase from the previous stripping cycle exhibits a catalytic effect on the extraction of gallium(III). Without this residual acid, extraction of gallium(III) from concentrated aluminum(III) solutions is slow. Overall, this system is the most promising for industrial application, as it does not require decomposing the Bayer liquor before extraction, yields a pure gallium product and the hydrophobicity of the diluent is high, leading to low rates of diluent loss and a stable phase ratio. Further improvements in extraction kinetics may be possible by combining the triazolium ionic liquid/Kelex® 100 system with the use of intensified solvent extraction techniques such as centrifugal contactors or by dispersion of the extracting phase on a solid support (supported ionic liquid phase).
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: 1H NMR spectra, pH changes upon extraction from carbonate solutions, graphs for slope analysis. See DOI: 10.1039/c9dt04623b |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2020 |