Precious Metals Recovery from Electroplating Wastewater: A Review

Metal bearing electroplating wastewater posts great health and environmental concerns, but could also provide opportunities for precious and valuable metal recovery, which can make the treatment process more cost-effective and sustainable. Current conventional electroplating wastewater treatment and...

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Published in:IOP Conference Series: Materials Science and Engineering
Main Author: Azmi A.A.; Jai J.; Zamanhuri N.A.; Yahya A.
Format: Conference paper
Language:English
Published: Institute of Physics Publishing 2018
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85050635001&doi=10.1088%2f1757-899X%2f358%2f1%2f012024&partnerID=40&md5=ce15a072ed978de6ff70b55c9fe36bea
id 2-s2.0-85050635001
spelling 2-s2.0-85050635001
Azmi A.A.; Jai J.; Zamanhuri N.A.; Yahya A.
Precious Metals Recovery from Electroplating Wastewater: A Review
2018
IOP Conference Series: Materials Science and Engineering
358
1
10.1088/1757-899X/358/1/012024
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85050635001&doi=10.1088%2f1757-899X%2f358%2f1%2f012024&partnerID=40&md5=ce15a072ed978de6ff70b55c9fe36bea
Metal bearing electroplating wastewater posts great health and environmental concerns, but could also provide opportunities for precious and valuable metal recovery, which can make the treatment process more cost-effective and sustainable. Current conventional electroplating wastewater treatment and metal recovery methods include chemical precipitation, coagulation and flocculation, ion exchange, membrane filtration, adsorption, electrochemical treatment and photocatalysis. However, these physico-chemical methods have several disadvantages such as high initial capital cost, high operational cost due to expensive chemical reagents and electricity supply, generation of metal complexes sludge which requires further treatment, ineffective in diluted and/or concentrated wastewater, low precious metal selectivity, and slow recovery process. On the other hand, metal bio-reduction assisted by bioactive phytochemical compounds extracted from plants and plant parts is a new found technology explored by several researchers in recent years aiming to recover precious and valuable metals from secondary sources mainly industrial wastewater by utilizing low-cost and eco-friendly biomaterials as reagents. Extract of plants contains polyphenolic compounds which have great antioxidant properties and reducing capacities, able to reduce metal ions into zerovalent metal atoms and stabilize the metal particles formed. This green bio-recovery method has a value added in their end products since the metals are recovered in nano-sized particles which are more valuable and have high commercial demand in other fields ranging from electrochemistry to medicine. © Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd.
Institute of Physics Publishing
17578981
English
Conference paper
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
author Azmi A.A.; Jai J.; Zamanhuri N.A.; Yahya A.
spellingShingle Azmi A.A.; Jai J.; Zamanhuri N.A.; Yahya A.
Precious Metals Recovery from Electroplating Wastewater: A Review
author_facet Azmi A.A.; Jai J.; Zamanhuri N.A.; Yahya A.
author_sort Azmi A.A.; Jai J.; Zamanhuri N.A.; Yahya A.
title Precious Metals Recovery from Electroplating Wastewater: A Review
title_short Precious Metals Recovery from Electroplating Wastewater: A Review
title_full Precious Metals Recovery from Electroplating Wastewater: A Review
title_fullStr Precious Metals Recovery from Electroplating Wastewater: A Review
title_full_unstemmed Precious Metals Recovery from Electroplating Wastewater: A Review
title_sort Precious Metals Recovery from Electroplating Wastewater: A Review
publishDate 2018
container_title IOP Conference Series: Materials Science and Engineering
container_volume 358
container_issue 1
doi_str_mv 10.1088/1757-899X/358/1/012024
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85050635001&doi=10.1088%2f1757-899X%2f358%2f1%2f012024&partnerID=40&md5=ce15a072ed978de6ff70b55c9fe36bea
description Metal bearing electroplating wastewater posts great health and environmental concerns, but could also provide opportunities for precious and valuable metal recovery, which can make the treatment process more cost-effective and sustainable. Current conventional electroplating wastewater treatment and metal recovery methods include chemical precipitation, coagulation and flocculation, ion exchange, membrane filtration, adsorption, electrochemical treatment and photocatalysis. However, these physico-chemical methods have several disadvantages such as high initial capital cost, high operational cost due to expensive chemical reagents and electricity supply, generation of metal complexes sludge which requires further treatment, ineffective in diluted and/or concentrated wastewater, low precious metal selectivity, and slow recovery process. On the other hand, metal bio-reduction assisted by bioactive phytochemical compounds extracted from plants and plant parts is a new found technology explored by several researchers in recent years aiming to recover precious and valuable metals from secondary sources mainly industrial wastewater by utilizing low-cost and eco-friendly biomaterials as reagents. Extract of plants contains polyphenolic compounds which have great antioxidant properties and reducing capacities, able to reduce metal ions into zerovalent metal atoms and stabilize the metal particles formed. This green bio-recovery method has a value added in their end products since the metals are recovered in nano-sized particles which are more valuable and have high commercial demand in other fields ranging from electrochemistry to medicine. © Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd.
publisher Institute of Physics Publishing
issn 17578981
language English
format Conference paper
accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
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