Recycling of Indium From CIGS Photovoltaic Cells: Potential of Combining Acid-Resistant Nanofiltration with Liquid-Liquid Extraction.

Y.S. Zimmermann, C. Niewersch, M. Lenz, P.F.X. Corvini, A. Schäffer, T. Wintgens

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

67 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Electronic consumer products such as smartphones, TV, computers, light-emitting diodes, and photovoltaic cells crucially depend on metals and metalloids. So-called “urban mining” considers them as secondary resources since they may contain precious elements at concentrations many times higher than their primary ores. Indium is of foremost interest being widely used, expensive, scarce and prone to supply risk. This study first investigated the capability of different nanofiltration membranes of extracting indium from copper–indium-gallium- selenide photovoltaic cell (CIGS) leachates under low pH conditions and low transmembrane pressure differences (98% by nanofiltration, separating it from parts of the Ag, Sb, Se, and Zn present. LLE using di-(2-ethylhexyl)phosphoric acid (D2EHPA) extracted 97% of the indium from the retentates, separating it from all other elements except for Mo, Al, and Sn. Overall, 95% (2.4 g m–2 CIGS) of the indium could be extracted to the D2EHPA phase. Simultaneously, by nanofiltration the consumption of D2EHPA was reduced by >60% due to the metal concentration in the reduced retentate volume. These results show clearly the potential for efficient scarce metal recovery from secondary resources. Furthermore, since nanofiltration was applicable at very low pH (=0.6), it may be applied in hydrometallurgy typically using acidic conditions.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)13412-13418
JournalEnvironmental Science and Technology
Volume48
Issue number22
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2014

Keywords

  • electronic waste
  • nf membranes
  • recovery
  • metals
  • environment
  • mechanisms
  • management
  • rejection
  • solutes
  • water

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