Open Access Article
M. C.
Lawrence
,
R. S.
Horne
and
B. A.
Blight
*
Department of Chemistry, University of New Brunswick, Fredericton, New Brunswick E3B 5A3, Canada. E-mail: b.blight@unb.ca
First published on 11th August 2025
Aluminium dross waste is generated during the aluminium smelting process and has an annual production of nearly 5.3 M tonnes worldwide. It is largely comprised of aluminium but also contains different metal oxides, silicates, and other impurities. We demonstrate how to make use of dross by producing high-value products (hydrogen gas, aluminium formate, aluminium acetate, aluminium hydroxide, MOF-303, Al-Fum) towards decarbonization of the aluminium industry. We produce hydrogen gas (1.1–1.2 L g−1 of dross) by digesting it with NaOH, while further outlining methods to upcycle this encased aluminium into high value materials, and identify a route to pure amporhous Al2O3via aluminium formate or aluminium acetate. We also demonstrate the production of the water harvesing MOF-303 and Al-Fum directly from processed dross as the aluminium source. This study highlights a complete overview of upcycling of aluminium dross to high value products towards a green energy shift, and industrial circircular economy.
Sustainability spotlightThe aluminum smelting industry generates a large amount of dross (approximately 5.3 M tonnes per year), a side product that is rich in aluminum, iron, magnesium and other metal ions. Although some recycling efforts exist, they require expensive equipment or are very energy intensive resulting in much of the dross being discarded as waste. This work illustrates a closed loop, low energy process to up-cycle dross into high-value aluminum compounds, specifically aluminum based porous materials. This work also highlights a route for calcination of aluminum-based materials to alumina at much lower temperatures than currently used in industrial procedures (SDG 12). In addition, white hydrogen fuel, an attractive carbon free energy source is generated (SDG 7). |
The two main processes of aluminium production are the Bayer process, in which bauxite is converted to aluminium oxide (alumina; Al2O3) by calcination of aluminium hydroxide (from Bauxite) at temperatures above 1000 °C,4 and the Hall–Héroult process where aluminium oxide is reduced to aluminium(0) (electrolysis at 900 °C; 13 Mwh kg−1).5 During the Hall–Héroult process a side product, termed dross, is produced. Dross is a combination of pure aluminium and other aluminium species (oxide, carbide, nitride), along with other metal oxides and silicates.6 Depending on the aluminium content, it is labelled as white or black dross. White dross typically contains between 50 and 80% recoverable aluminium while black dross contains much less (7–50%).7 During aluminium smelting it is estimated that dross is produced in 6–8% of total amount of aluminium produced.8 Canada, a major producer of aluminium, produced an estimated 250
000 tonnes of dross in 2022, while the global dross production estimated at 5.3 M tonnes.9 Much of this dross is untreated and put in landfill, posing environmental risks.10,11 Given that dross is largely comprised of valuable materials, it should not be treated as landfill. Recycling efforts for dross do exist, focusing on recovering pure aluminium or alumina. These methods tend to be energy intensive and have not been well implemented due to high cost of infrastructure and operation.12 The most popular dross upcycling method involves a rotary salt furnace, allowing separation of aluminium from the other elements in the dross.13 Dross has been used as an additive to building materials including, cement, bricks and ceramics. Adding dross to these materials increases their corrosion resistance, fire retardation, and strength.14
We describe here that through the digestion of dross we form hydrogen gas – carbon-free energy dense gas, and an extremely attractive fuel source – and aluminium hydroxide – a common reagents used in pharmaceuticals, cosmetics, fire retardants and feedstock materials in the chemical industry.15–17 We demonstrate direct conversion of this aluminium hydroxide to aluminium-based metal–organic frameworks (MOFs), which are a class of porous solids (akin to zeolitic materials) that have a robust variety of applications ranging from drug delivery, catalyst, and gas storage.18,19 We also report that bulk low-temperature calcination of these framework materials produces high-purity aluminium oxide, another commercial commodity material. In short, we synergistically produce several high-value materials from dross, in a low-energy, low-waste route towards a decarbonized zero-waste aluminium smelting industry (Fig. 1).
To further understand the makeup of the dross samples, powder X-ray diffraction (PXRD) patterns of finely ground dross were collected (Fig. 2). The crystalline phases of dross was identified as aluminium oxide, pure aluminium, magnesium aluminium oxide, iron oxide, and magnesium oxide. The compounds identified in the diffractograms agree with the elements detected through uXRF.
While samples contain high amounts of Al, Mg, Na, and, Fe, they also contain a considerable amount of oxygen. Aluminium is an oxyphilic compound, and during dross formation it is oxidized to from an outer layer of aluminium oxide.22 This outer layer prevents the reaction between water and aluminium and must be removed for efficient generation of hydrogen gas. Reports in the literature suggest using mechanochemical milling to remove the outer oxide layer, exposing the aluminium encased in the dross.23,24 Other procedures suggest using a caustic solution (potassium/sodium hydroxide) to remove the outer oxide layer exposing the pure aluminium.11,25 We used a combination of both these methods to provide a quick, and near quantitative generation of hydrogen gas.
![]() | (1) |
![]() | (2) |
| Na[Al(OH)4](aq) ↔ Al(OH)3(aq) + NaOH(aq) | (3) |
To evaluate the amount of hydrogen produced by digesting white dross, water displacement measurements were performed at room temperature and atmospheric pressure (details in SI, Fig. S1).11,20 The reaction was allowed to proceed overnight, ensuring complete digestion of the dross. The results are summarized in Table 1. Samples 1, 2, and 4 demonstrated similar hydrogen generation values. On average these samples generated 1.1–1.2 litres of hydrogen per gram of dross. This is equivalent to 12–13 MJ of energy from one kilogram of dross.
The purity of the hydrogen gas was also evaluated though gas chromatography. The gas was comprised mainly of hydrogen (92.6%), oxygen (1.5%) and nitrogen (5.9%). We attribute the presence of oxygen and nitrogen to ambient air in the sample. In atmospheric air, a typical ratio of approximately 4
:
1 nitrogen to oxygen is present, which was observed (in much lower concentrations) in the gas samples collected. The hydrogen purity was comparable to previously reported values of hydrogen generated from black dross (93.2 mol%).21
Aluminium hydroxide is soluble in both acidic and basic media, but precipitates in neutral pH. Industrially, neutralizing a high pH system requires large amounts of acid and poses significant safety risks. We make use of the dissolution properties of aluminium hydroxide and its equilibrium with sodium aluminium hydroxide as outlined in eqn (2) and (3), respectively, and induce precipitation as saturation occurs, further driving disproportion of NaAl(OH)4 to make Al(OH)3. Previous reports outline this strategy, but have inaccurately identified the resulting precipitate as aluminium oxide, or as a broader aluminium oxygen species.28,29 David and Kopac demonstrated that the digestion of black dross leads to the formation of aluminium oxide hydroxide, which is different from the aluminium hydroxide isolated in this work.11
We characterized our aluminium hydroxide precipitate with uXRF, revealing aluminium and oxygen (38.5% and 60.1% respectively SI Table S9) as the major components, along with trace amounts of magnesium, sodium, and iron. These results agree with the obtained PXRD pattern (Fig. 3), displaying major signals for aluminium hydroxide, along with peaks representing magnesium oxide, magnesium aluminium oxide, and aluminium oxide. These patterns are a qualitative representation of the sample and display the crystalline materials present.30
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| Fig. 3 Powder X-ray diffraction pattern of isolated aluminium hydroxide (top) and simulated powder X-ray diffraction pattern of Bayerite (Al(OH)3, bottom). | ||
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| Fig. 4 Powder X-ray diffraction patter of ALF (A) as synthesized (bottom) and after heating at 600 °C overnight (top) and AlAc (B) as synthesized (bottom) and after heating at 600 °C overnight (top). | ||
Aluminium hydroxyacetate (AlAc) was also synthesized similarly to previous literature procedures.32 Our crude aluminium hydroxide was refluxed in concentrated glacial acetic acid overnight. The resulting precipitate was then isolated by suction filtration and characterized by uXRF (Table S10), PXRD (Fig. 4B), and TGA (Fig. S3). The obtained PXRD pattern matches the literature for aluminium hydroxyacetate (Al(OH)(CH3COO)2). uXRF of the crude AlAc indicates the sample is mainly comprised of aluminium, with small amounts of titanium, and iron metals (85.45, 9.07 and 3.22 weight percent respectively. See Table S10 for full sample composition). This remains consistent with the observations of ALF synthesized directly from the Al(OH)3 precipitated from dross digestion. The TGA of the resulting compound showed a mass loss of 68.8%, within close agreement of the theoretical value of 68.3% and close to the reported value of 68.2%, confirming the formation of Al(OH)(CH3COO)2.32 The synthesized AlAc was then heated above its decomposition temperature (600 °C) and the resulting powder was characterized through PXRD and uXRF, with powder pattern no longer matches that of AlAc, and only signals of impurities remain. uXRF of the calcined material indicated the metal contaminants to primarily be titanium and iron (see Table S11 for full composition).
:
1
:
1 (Al(OH)3
:
CHOOH
:
H2O w
:
v
:
w), followed by heating for 3 minutes at 110 °C. Once the heating phase was complete, the insoluble impurities were separated from the filtrate. The filtrate, now containing dissolved aluminium hydroxide and formic acid, was returned to heating at 110 °C. Once the heating was complete, the white precipitate was isolated and identified as ALF via PXRD (Fig. 5A). The approach to synthesising pure AlAc, however, differed slightly from ALF. During the heating of Al(OH)3 in glacial acetic acid the AlAc would precipitate faster than Al(OH)3 dissolution, inhibiting filtration of insoluble impurities. To overcome this, the impure Al(OH)3 was heated in concentrated hydrochloric acid over the course of 2 hours. At this point the Al(OH)3 was dissolved, leaving solid impurities to be removed by suction filtration. A white precipitate was isolated after neutralisation with sodium hydroxide. This precipitate was added to excess glacial acetic acid and heated overnight resulting in a white precipitate, identified as AlAc (Fig. 5D).
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| Fig. 5 Powder X-ray diffraction patterns of ALF and AlAc synthesized via purification methods (A and D) followed by heating at 400 °C or 600 °C overnight (ALF B and C, AlAc E and F, respectively). | ||
The observed PXRD diffractograms for both ALF and AlAc showed their respective dominant phase regardless of the purification step being performed or not. This is due to the ALF or AlAc being the main component to the sample, dwarfing trace impurity signals. To ensure that all impurities were removed the samples were heated at 400 °C (Fig. 5B and E) and 600 °C (Fig. 5C and F) overnight. At these temperatures the ALF or AlAc would convert to the non-crystalline Al2O3, while crystalline impurities would be detected. Calcination of the purified ALF and AlAc resulted in PXRD patterns with no trace of previously observed impurities (Fig. 5). The patterns show no discernible crystalline phases, but instead baseline drift, indicating the presence of the dominant amorphous Al2O3 phase,30,32 and confirmed by uXRF. uXRF of ALF heated at 400 °C or 600 °C showed approximately 35 and 47 weight % for aluminium and oxygen respectively (see Table S7 and S8 for full breakdown). Heated AlAc revealed a metal content of 99.45 weight % aluminium, which would correspond to 99.59% Al2O3 (see S12 and S13). The uXRF results demonstrate how effective this approach to the purification of Al(OH)3 is, and its impact on the production of pristine ALF, AlAc, and high-purity Al2O3, above 99.5% pure a requirement for the Hall–Héroult process.
Yaghi's traditional synthesis reacts aluminium chloride and sodium hydroxide, generating aluminium hydroxide in situ.36 The route outlined in this work generates aluminium hydroxide from the reaction of aluminium waste with sodium hydroxide, removing the reliance on aluminium chloride and adding a layer of sustainability to the synthesis. To ensure pure MOF production, we perform the dross digestion at a ratio of 1 g of dross per 10 mL of 1 M sodium hydroxide solution. At this concentration the aluminium hydroxide remains soluble, and the insoluble impurities are easily removed. The concentration of sodium hydroxide used to digest the aluminium waste in is much higher than the concentration used in the typical synthesis of MOF-303, thus diluting the aluminium hydroxide solution with water at a ratio of approximately 1
:
11.5 achieves the aluminium and sodium hydroxide concentrations established in previous protocols.36 The ligand was then added following established literature ratios, followed by heating overnight yielded a white powder. Once washed with water and alcohol (methanol or ethanol) pure MOF-303 was obtained (Fig. S4 and S5).36
Al-Fum combines an aluminium centre with a fumaric acid as a ligand, and is an industrially relevant MOF produced at scale by BASF (BASF A 520).37 Al-Fum has shown potential for CO2 adsorption from wet gas streams, photocatalytic hydrogen production, and chlorofluorocarbons adsorption and selectivity.37–39 The synthesis that BASF preforms on the tonne scale uses aluminium sulphate and sodium hydroxide to generate aluminium hydroxide in situ.37 Using the same procedure as highlighted for MOF-303, we produced a solution of aluminium hydroxide, that was diluted with water at a ratio of 1
:
20 to synthesize Al-Fum from waste aluminium, adding a layer of sustainability to this industrial synthesis.
The synthesis of both MOFs was confirmed via N2 adsorption measurements. Both MOF-303 and Al-Fum produced a type I isotherm, and a calculated BET surface area of 1450 and 850 m2 g−1 respectively (Fig. S4).36,39 Both calculated values agree with previously published literature values of 1300 and 965 m2 g−1 respectively.36,39 PXRD pattern of our synthesized material match those published in the literature (Fig. S5).36,39 It should be noted that both these MOF can be calcined above 600 °C to produce γ-Al2O3 once the MOFs have reached end of life.36,39
| Current methods | This work | |
|---|---|---|
| MOF-303 synthesis | AlCl3 (ref. 36) | White dross |
| Al-Fum synthesis | Al(SO4)3·9H2O39 | White dross |
| ALF and AlAc synthesis | Al(OH)3 (ref. 31 and 32) | White dross |
| Calcination temperatures | Ca. 1000 °C40 | Ca. 600 °C |
| Hydrogen production | N/A | 1.2 L g−1 dross |
| Al(OH)3 isolation | Heat, water, seed crystals4 | Spontaneous precipitation |
| Al(OH)3 purification | N/A | ALF, AlAc synthesis |
| Dross uses | Some recovery efforts, landfill11 | White H2 gas, Al(OH)3 isolation, porous materials, Al2O3 |
Our findings show that there remains a significant fuel source (64 PJ of energy in the form of hydrogen) and other value-add materials to be drawn globally from the 5.3 M tonnes of aluminium dross waste being produced annually. This does not account for secondary domestic or commercial aluminium waste materials (including drinking vessels and other aluminium salvage) that require recycling, an area we are now looking to capture in the design of bench and pilot scale processes.
Supplementary information containing general experimental details, MOF syntheses, hydrogen analyses, and supporting analytical data is available. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d5su00631g.
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