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Leaching (chemistry)

Leaching is the process of a solute becoming detached or extracted from its carrier substance by way of a solvent.[1]

Leaching is a naturally occurring process which scientists have adapted for a variety of applications with a variety of methods. Specific extraction methods depend on the soluble characteristics relative to the sorbent material such as concentration, distribution, nature, and size.[1] Leaching can occur naturally seen from plant substances (inorganic and organic),[2][3] solute leaching in soil,[4] and in the decomposition of organic materials.[5] Leaching can also be applied affectedly to enhance water quality and contaminant removal,[1][6] as well as for disposal of hazardous waste products such as fly ash,[7] or rare earth elements (REEs).[8] Understanding leaching characteristics is important in preventing or encouraging the leaching process and preparing for it in the case where it is inevitable.[2]

In an ideal leaching equilibrium stage, all the solute is dissolved by the solvent, leaving the carrier of the solute unchanged.[1] The process of leaching however is not always ideal, and can be quite complex to understand and replicate,[6] and often different methodologies will produce different results.[9]

Leaching occurring in a cement wall due to natural weathering events.

Leaching processes

There are many types of leaching scenarios; therefore, the extent of this topic is vast.[1][3][9] In general, however, the three substances can be described as:

  • a carrier, substance A;
  • a solute, substance B;
  • and a solvent, substance C.[1][8]

Substance A and B are somewhat homogenous in a system prior to the introduction of substance C.[10] At the beginning of the leaching process, substance C will work at dissolving the surficial substance B at a fairly high rate.[1] The rate of dissolution will decrease substantially once it needs to penetrate through the pores of substance A in order to continue targeting substance B.[1] This penetration can often lead to dissolution of substance A,[1] or the product of more than one solute,[10] both unsatisfactory if specific leaching is desired. The physiochemical and biological properties of the carrier and solute should be considered when observing the leaching process, and certain properties may be more important depending on the material, the solvent, and their availability.[9] These specific properties can include, but are not limited to:

The general process is typically broken up and summarized into three parts:[1]

  1. Dissolution of surficial solute by solvent
  2. Diffusion of inner-solute through the pores of the carrier to reach the solvent
  3. Transfer of dissolved solute out of the system

Leaching processes for biological substances

Biological substances can experience leaching themselves,[2] as well as be used for leaching as part of the solvent substance to recover heavy metals.[6] Many plants experience leaching of phenolics, carbohydrates, and amino acids, and can experience as much as 30% mass loss from leaching,[5] just from sources of water such as rain, dew, mist, and fog.[2] These sources of water would be considered the solvent in the leaching process and can also lead to the leaching of organic nutrients from plants such as free sugars, pectic substances, and sugar alcohols.[2] This can in turn lead to more diversity in plant species that may experience a more direct access to water.[2] This type of leaching can often lead to the removal of an undesirable component from the solid by water, this process is called washing.[11] A major concern for leaching of plants, is if pesticides are leached and carried through stormwater runoff,;[3] this is not only necessary to plant health, but it is important to control because pesticides can be toxic to human and animal health.[3]

Bioleaching is a term that describes the removal of metal cations from insoluble ores by biological oxidation and complexation processes.[6] This process is done in most part to extract copper, cobalt, nickel, zinc, and uranium from insoluble sulfides or oxides.[6] Bioleaching processes can also be used in the re-use of fly ash by recovering aluminum using sulfuric acid.[7]

Leaching processes for fly ash

Coal fly ash is a product that experiences heavy amounts of leaching during disposal.[7] Though the re-use of fly ash in other materials such as concrete and bricks is encouraged, still much of it in the United States is disposed of in holding ponds, lagoons, landfills, and slag heaps.[7] These disposal sites all contain water where washing effects can cause leaching of many different major elements, depending on the type of fly ash and the location where it originated.[7] The leaching of fly ash is only concerning if the fly ash has not been disposed of properly, such as in the case of the Kingston Fossil Plant in Roane County, Tennessee.[12] The Tennessee Valley Authority Kingston Fossil Plant structural failure lead to massive destruction throughout the area and serious levels of contamination downstream to both Emory River and Clinch River.[12]

Leaching processes in soil

Leaching in soil is highly dependent on the characteristics of the soil, which makes modeling efforts difficult.[4] Most leaching comes from infiltration of water, a washing effect much like that described for the leaching process of biological substances.[4][11] The leaching is typically described by solute transport models, such as Darcy's Law, mass flow expressions, and diffusion-dispersion understandings.[4] Leaching is controlled largely by the hydraulic conductivity of the soil, which is dependent on particle size and relative density that the soil has been consolidated to via stress.[4] Diffusion is controlled by other factors such as pore size and soil skeleton, tortuosity of flow path, and distribution of the solvent (water) and solutes.[4]

Leaching mechanisms

Due to the assortment of leaching processes there are many variations in the data to be collected through laboratory methods and modeling, making it hard to interpret the data itself.[10] Not only is the specified leaching process important, but also the focus of the experimentation itself. For instance, the focus could be directed toward mechanisms causing leaching, mineralogy as a group or individually, or the solvent that causes leaching.[10] Most tests are done by evaluating mass loss due to a reagent, heat, or simply washing with water.[1] A summary of various leaching processes and their respective laboratory tests can be viewed in the following table:

Table 1: Laboratory Tests for Various Leaching Processes
Leaching Process Laboratory Tests
Waste Leachate Removal Batch Test or Column Test[9]
Leaching from Plants t-test or permutation test[5]
Mobilization of Metal Cations Bioleaching[6]
Leaching Fly Ash Evaporation from Disposal Pond[7]
Cellular Extraction Light Petroleum Fractions, Trichlorethylene Solvent, or Acetone/Ether Solvent[1]
Coarse Solids Leaching Batch Plant[1]
Fine Solids Leaching Agitation by Mechanical Stirrer or Compressed Air[1]

Environmentally friendly leaching

Some recent work has been done to see if organic acids can be used to leach lithium and cobalt from spent batteries with some success. Experiments performed with varying temperatures and concentrations of malic acid show that the optimal conditions are 2.0 m/L of organic acid at a temperature of 90 °C.[13] The reaction had an overall efficiency exceeding 90% with no harmful byproducts.

4 LiCoO2(solid) + 12 C4H6O5(liquid) → 4 LiC4H5O5(liquid) + 4 Co(C4H6O5)2(liquid) + 6 H2O(liquid) + O2(gas)

The same analysis with citric acid showed similar results with an optimal temperature and concentration of 90 °C and 1.5 molar solution of citric acid.[14]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Richardson, J. F.; Harker, J. H.; Backhurst, J. R. (2002), Richardson, J. F.; Harker, J. H.; Backhurst, J. R. (eds.), "CHAPTER 10 - Leaching", Chemical Engineering (Fifth Edition), Chemical Engineering Series, Butterworth-Heinemann, pp. 502–541, doi:10.1016/b978-0-08-049064-9.50021-7, ISBN 9780080490649
  2. ^ a b c d e f Tukey, H.B. (1970). "The Leaching of Substances from Plants". Annual Review of Plant Physiology. 21 (1): 305–324. doi:10.1146/annurev.pp.21.060170.001513. ISSN 0066-4294.
  3. ^ a b c d Dubus, I.G.; Beulke, S.; Brown, C.D. (2002). "Calibration of pesticide leaching models: critical review and guidance for reporting". Pest Management Science. 58 (8): 745–758. doi:10.1002/ps.526. ISSN 1526-4998. PMID 12192898.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Addiscott, T. M.; Wagenet, R. J. (1985). "Concepts of solute leaching in soils: a review of modelling approaches". Journal of Soil Science. 36 (3): 411–424. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2389.1985.tb00347.x. ISSN 1365-2389.
  5. ^ a b c Bärlocher, Felix (2005), Graça, M.A.S.; Bärlocher, Felix; Gessner, M.O. (eds.), "CHAPTER 5 - Leaching", Methods to Study Litter Decomposition: A Practical Guide, Springer Netherlands, pp. 33–36, doi:10.1007/1-4020-3466-0_5, ISBN 9781402034664
  6. ^ a b c d e f Rohwerder, T.; Gehrke, T.; Kinzler, K.; Sand, W. (2003). "Bioleaching review part A: Progress in bioleaching: Fundamentals and mechanisms of bacterial metal sulfide oxidation". Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology. 63 (3): 239–248. doi:10.1007/s00253-003-1448-7. ISSN 1432-0614. PMID 14566432. S2CID 25547087.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Iyer, R. (2002). "The surface chemistry of leaching coal fly ash". Journal of Hazardous Materials. 93 (3): 321–329. doi:10.1016/S0304-3894(02)00049-3. ISSN 0304-3894. PMID 12137992.
  8. ^ a b Peelman, S.; Sun, Z.H.I.; Sietsma, J.; Yang, Y. (2016), "CHAPTER 21 - Leaching of Rare Earth Elements: Review of Past and Present Technologies", Rare Earths Industry, Elsevier, pp. 319–334, doi:10.1016/b978-0-12-802328-0.00021-8, ISBN 9780128023280, retrieved 2019-10-17
  9. ^ a b c d e f g Perket, C.L.; Webster, W.C. (1981). "Literature Review of Batch Laboratory Leaching and Extraction Procedures". In Conway, R.; Malloy, B. (eds.). Hazardous Solid Waste Testing: First Conference. Fatigue and Fracture Mechanics. (West Conshohocken, PA: ASTM International 1981): ASTM. pp. 7–7–21. doi:10.1520/stp28826s. ISBN 978-0-8031-0795-3. ISSN 1040-3094 – via in Hazardous Solid Waste Testing: First Conference.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  10. ^ a b c d e f g Prosser, A.P. (1996). "Review of uncertainty in the collection and interpretation of leaching data". Hydrometallurgy. 41 (2): 119–153. doi:10.1016/0304-386X(95)00071-N. ISSN 0304-386X.
  11. ^ a b Geankoplis, Christie (2004). Transport Process and Separation Principles. NJ: Pretence Hall. pp. 802–817. ISBN 978-0-13-101367-4.
  12. ^ a b "Kingston Fossil Plant coal fly ash slurry spill", Wikipedia, 2019-11-18, retrieved 2019-11-21
  13. ^ Li, Li; Jing Ge; Renjie Chen; Feng Wu; Shi Chen; Xiaoxiao Zhang (2010). "Environmental friendly leaching reagent for cobalt and lithium recovery". International Journal of Integrated Waste Management, Science and Technology. Waste Management. 30 (12): 2615–2621. doi:10.1016/j.wasman.2010.08.008. PMID 20817431. Retrieved December 22, 2011.
  14. ^ Li, Li; Jing Ge; Feng Wu; Renjie Chen; Shi Chen; Borong Wu (2010). "Recovery of cobalt and lithium from spent lithium ion batteries using organic citric acid as leachant". Journal of Hazardous Materials. 176 (1–3): 288–293. doi:10.1016/j.jhazmat.2009.11.026. PMID 19954882.

leaching, chemistry, other, uses, leaching, leaching, process, solute, becoming, detached, extracted, from, carrier, substance, solvent, leaching, naturally, occurring, process, which, scientists, have, adapted, variety, applications, with, variety, methods, s. For other uses see Leaching Leaching is the process of a solute becoming detached or extracted from its carrier substance by way of a solvent 1 Leaching is a naturally occurring process which scientists have adapted for a variety of applications with a variety of methods Specific extraction methods depend on the soluble characteristics relative to the sorbent material such as concentration distribution nature and size 1 Leaching can occur naturally seen from plant substances inorganic and organic 2 3 solute leaching in soil 4 and in the decomposition of organic materials 5 Leaching can also be applied affectedly to enhance water quality and contaminant removal 1 6 as well as for disposal of hazardous waste products such as fly ash 7 or rare earth elements REEs 8 Understanding leaching characteristics is important in preventing or encouraging the leaching process and preparing for it in the case where it is inevitable 2 In an ideal leaching equilibrium stage all the solute is dissolved by the solvent leaving the carrier of the solute unchanged 1 The process of leaching however is not always ideal and can be quite complex to understand and replicate 6 and often different methodologies will produce different results 9 Leaching occurring in a cement wall due to natural weathering events Contents 1 Leaching processes 1 1 Leaching processes for biological substances 1 2 Leaching processes for fly ash 1 3 Leaching processes in soil 2 Leaching mechanisms 3 Environmentally friendly leaching 4 See also 5 ReferencesLeaching processes EditThere are many types of leaching scenarios therefore the extent of this topic is vast 1 3 9 In general however the three substances can be described as a carrier substance A a solute substance B and a solvent substance C 1 8 Substance A and B are somewhat homogenous in a system prior to the introduction of substance C 10 At the beginning of the leaching process substance C will work at dissolving the surficial substance B at a fairly high rate 1 The rate of dissolution will decrease substantially once it needs to penetrate through the pores of substance A in order to continue targeting substance B 1 This penetration can often lead to dissolution of substance A 1 or the product of more than one solute 10 both unsatisfactory if specific leaching is desired The physiochemical and biological properties of the carrier and solute should be considered when observing the leaching process and certain properties may be more important depending on the material the solvent and their availability 9 These specific properties can include but are not limited to Particle size 1 Solvent 1 Temperature 1 Agitation 1 Surface area 9 Homogeneity of the carrier and solute 9 Microorganism activity 9 Mineralogy 10 Intermediate products 10 Crystal structure 10 The general process is typically broken up and summarized into three parts 1 Dissolution of surficial solute by solvent Diffusion of inner solute through the pores of the carrier to reach the solvent Transfer of dissolved solute out of the systemLeaching processes for biological substances Edit Biological substances can experience leaching themselves 2 as well as be used for leaching as part of the solvent substance to recover heavy metals 6 Many plants experience leaching of phenolics carbohydrates and amino acids and can experience as much as 30 mass loss from leaching 5 just from sources of water such as rain dew mist and fog 2 These sources of water would be considered the solvent in the leaching process and can also lead to the leaching of organic nutrients from plants such as free sugars pectic substances and sugar alcohols 2 This can in turn lead to more diversity in plant species that may experience a more direct access to water 2 This type of leaching can often lead to the removal of an undesirable component from the solid by water this process is called washing 11 A major concern for leaching of plants is if pesticides are leached and carried through stormwater runoff 3 this is not only necessary to plant health but it is important to control because pesticides can be toxic to human and animal health 3 Bioleaching is a term that describes the removal of metal cations from insoluble ores by biological oxidation and complexation processes 6 This process is done in most part to extract copper cobalt nickel zinc and uranium from insoluble sulfides or oxides 6 Bioleaching processes can also be used in the re use of fly ash by recovering aluminum using sulfuric acid 7 Leaching processes for fly ash Edit Coal fly ash is a product that experiences heavy amounts of leaching during disposal 7 Though the re use of fly ash in other materials such as concrete and bricks is encouraged still much of it in the United States is disposed of in holding ponds lagoons landfills and slag heaps 7 These disposal sites all contain water where washing effects can cause leaching of many different major elements depending on the type of fly ash and the location where it originated 7 The leaching of fly ash is only concerning if the fly ash has not been disposed of properly such as in the case of the Kingston Fossil Plant in Roane County Tennessee 12 The Tennessee Valley Authority Kingston Fossil Plant structural failure lead to massive destruction throughout the area and serious levels of contamination downstream to both Emory River and Clinch River 12 Leaching processes in soil Edit Leaching in soil is highly dependent on the characteristics of the soil which makes modeling efforts difficult 4 Most leaching comes from infiltration of water a washing effect much like that described for the leaching process of biological substances 4 11 The leaching is typically described by solute transport models such as Darcy s Law mass flow expressions and diffusion dispersion understandings 4 Leaching is controlled largely by the hydraulic conductivity of the soil which is dependent on particle size and relative density that the soil has been consolidated to via stress 4 Diffusion is controlled by other factors such as pore size and soil skeleton tortuosity of flow path and distribution of the solvent water and solutes 4 Leaching mechanisms EditDue to the assortment of leaching processes there are many variations in the data to be collected through laboratory methods and modeling making it hard to interpret the data itself 10 Not only is the specified leaching process important but also the focus of the experimentation itself For instance the focus could be directed toward mechanisms causing leaching mineralogy as a group or individually or the solvent that causes leaching 10 Most tests are done by evaluating mass loss due to a reagent heat or simply washing with water 1 A summary of various leaching processes and their respective laboratory tests can be viewed in the following table Table 1 Laboratory Tests for Various Leaching Processes Leaching Process Laboratory TestsWaste Leachate Removal Batch Test or Column Test 9 Leaching from Plants t test or permutation test 5 Mobilization of Metal Cations Bioleaching 6 Leaching Fly Ash Evaporation from Disposal Pond 7 Cellular Extraction Light Petroleum Fractions Trichlorethylene Solvent or Acetone Ether Solvent 1 Coarse Solids Leaching Batch Plant 1 Fine Solids Leaching Agitation by Mechanical Stirrer or Compressed Air 1 Environmentally friendly leaching EditSome recent work has been done to see if organic acids can be used to leach lithium and cobalt from spent batteries with some success Experiments performed with varying temperatures and concentrations of malic acid show that the optimal conditions are 2 0 m L of organic acid at a temperature of 90 C 13 The reaction had an overall efficiency exceeding 90 with no harmful byproducts 4 LiCoO2 solid 12 C4H6O5 liquid 4 LiC4H5O5 liquid 4 Co C4H6O5 2 liquid 6 H2O liquid O2 gas The same analysis with citric acid showed similar results with an optimal temperature and concentration of 90 C and 1 5 molar solution of citric acid 14 See also EditExtraction Leachate Parboiling Surfactant leaching Sorption WeatheringReferences Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Richardson J F Harker J H Backhurst J R 2002 Richardson J F Harker J H Backhurst J R eds CHAPTER 10 Leaching Chemical Engineering Fifth Edition Chemical Engineering Series Butterworth Heinemann pp 502 541 doi 10 1016 b978 0 08 049064 9 50021 7 ISBN 9780080490649 a b c d e f Tukey H B 1970 The Leaching of Substances from Plants Annual Review of Plant Physiology 21 1 305 324 doi 10 1146 annurev pp 21 060170 001513 ISSN 0066 4294 a b c d Dubus I G Beulke S Brown C D 2002 Calibration of pesticide leaching models critical review and guidance for reporting Pest Management Science 58 8 745 758 doi 10 1002 ps 526 ISSN 1526 4998 PMID 12192898 a b c d e f Addiscott T M Wagenet R J 1985 Concepts of solute leaching in soils a review of modelling approaches Journal of Soil Science 36 3 411 424 doi 10 1111 j 1365 2389 1985 tb00347 x ISSN 1365 2389 a b c Barlocher Felix 2005 Graca M A S Barlocher Felix Gessner M O eds CHAPTER 5 Leaching Methods to Study Litter Decomposition A Practical Guide Springer Netherlands pp 33 36 doi 10 1007 1 4020 3466 0 5 ISBN 9781402034664 a b c d e f Rohwerder T Gehrke T Kinzler K Sand W 2003 Bioleaching review part A Progress in bioleaching Fundamentals and mechanisms of bacterial metal sulfide oxidation Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology 63 3 239 248 doi 10 1007 s00253 003 1448 7 ISSN 1432 0614 PMID 14566432 S2CID 25547087 a b c d e f Iyer R 2002 The surface chemistry of leaching coal fly ash Journal of Hazardous Materials 93 3 321 329 doi 10 1016 S0304 3894 02 00049 3 ISSN 0304 3894 PMID 12137992 a b Peelman S Sun Z H I Sietsma J Yang Y 2016 CHAPTER 21 Leaching of Rare Earth Elements Review of Past and Present Technologies Rare Earths Industry Elsevier pp 319 334 doi 10 1016 b978 0 12 802328 0 00021 8 ISBN 9780128023280 retrieved 2019 10 17 a b c d e f g Perket C L Webster W C 1981 Literature Review of Batch Laboratory Leaching and Extraction Procedures In Conway R Malloy B eds Hazardous Solid Waste Testing First Conference Fatigue and Fracture Mechanics West Conshohocken PA ASTM International 1981 ASTM pp 7 7 21 doi 10 1520 stp28826s ISBN 978 0 8031 0795 3 ISSN 1040 3094 via in Hazardous Solid Waste Testing First Conference a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link a b c d e f g Prosser A P 1996 Review of uncertainty in the collection and interpretation of leaching data Hydrometallurgy 41 2 119 153 doi 10 1016 0304 386X 95 00071 N ISSN 0304 386X a b Geankoplis Christie 2004 Transport Process and Separation Principles NJ Pretence Hall pp 802 817 ISBN 978 0 13 101367 4 a b Kingston Fossil Plant coal fly ash slurry spill Wikipedia 2019 11 18 retrieved 2019 11 21 Li Li Jing Ge Renjie Chen Feng Wu Shi Chen Xiaoxiao Zhang 2010 Environmental friendly leaching reagent for cobalt and lithium recovery International Journal of Integrated Waste Management Science and Technology Waste Management 30 12 2615 2621 doi 10 1016 j wasman 2010 08 008 PMID 20817431 Retrieved December 22 2011 Li Li Jing Ge Feng Wu Renjie Chen Shi Chen Borong Wu 2010 Recovery of cobalt and lithium from spent lithium ion batteries using organic citric acid as leachant Journal of Hazardous Materials 176 1 3 288 293 doi 10 1016 j jhazmat 2009 11 026 PMID 19954882 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Leaching chemistry amp oldid 1123654252, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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