Recycling rare earth from ultrafine NdFeB waste by capturing fluorine ions in wastewater and preparing them into nano-scale neodynium oxyfluoride

Author(s):  
He Sun ◽  
Tuoyao Wang ◽  
Chengxiang Li ◽  
Yusheng Yang
Keyword(s):  
Minerals ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 206 ◽  
Author(s):  
James Hower ◽  
Dali Qian ◽  
Nicolas Briot ◽  
Eduardo Santillan-Jimenez ◽  
Madison Hood ◽  
...  

Fly ash from the combustion of eastern Kentucky Fire Clay coal in a southeastern United States pulverized-coal power plant was studied by scanning electron microscopy (SEM), transmission electron microscopy (TEM), and selected area electron diffraction (SAED). TEM combined with elemental analysis via energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS) showed that rare earth elements (REE; specifically, La, Ce, Nd, Pr, and Sm) were distributed within glassy particles. In certain cases, the REE were accompanied by phosphorous, suggesting a monazite or similar mineral form. However, the electron diffraction patterns of apparent phosphate minerals were not definitive, and P-lean regions of the glass consisted of amorphous phases. Therefore, the distribution of the REE in the fly ash seemed to be in the form of TEM-visible nano-scale crystalline minerals, with additional distributions corresponding to overlapping ultra-fine minerals and even true atomic dispersion within the fly ash glass.


2006 ◽  
Vol 309-311 ◽  
pp. 1215-1218
Author(s):  
Kiyotaka Yamada ◽  
Junji Ikeda ◽  
Giuseppe Pezzotti

The electro-stimulated luminescence spectrum of a rare-earth ion added to zirconia (ZrO2) lattice was investigated with the aim of using it as a sensor for nano-scale stress (fluorescence piezo-spectroscopy) and phase transformation assessments in a field emission scanning electron microscope (FE-SEM). In this paper, the selected rare-earth fluorescent ion Eu, added to ZrO2 as a raw oxide powder (Eu2O3) before sintering (in the amount of 1.0 wt. %). Spectroscopic results indicated that the spectral shift of some fluorescent band of the selected rare-earth ion was sensitive to residual stress and that the electron-stimulated spectra of Eu2O3-doped ZrO2 in its tetragonal and monoclinic polymorphs were different to each other. Based on these findings, the luminescent substance can be useful as a “stress and phase transformation sensor”, in order to clarify the elementary mechanisms behind synthetic ZrO2.


2013 ◽  
Vol 631-632 ◽  
pp. 622-626 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yun Ping Cheng ◽  
Cheng Yong Wang ◽  
Wen Ge Wu ◽  
Ying Ning Hu

Diamond cup wheel is one of important tools for machining of ceramic tile. In this paper, ceramic tiles were ground by diamond cup wheels which segments adding nano-scale rare-earth oxide and nano-scale carbide on a special designed test machine. The wear resistance of diamond cup wheels and materials’ removal process of ceramic tiles had been tested, and grinding ratio were calculated and compared. Different grinding ratios can be obtained according to different technological parameters. The segments of adding nano-scale rare-earth oxide and nano-scale carbide were observed from microgram and metallography structural pattern. The results showed that nano-scale rare-earth oxide and nano-scale carbide can fine structure, make grain boundary clear and increase grasping of diamond grits.


2019 ◽  
Vol 104 (10) ◽  
pp. 1389-1401 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cara E. Vennari ◽  
Quentin Williams

Abstract Bastnäsite-(Ce), a rare earth element (REE) bearing carbonate (Ce,La,Y,Nd,Pr)CO3F, is one of the most common REE-bearing minerals and has importance from both economic and geologic perspectives due to its large REE concentration. It also provides an example of the structural interplay between carbonate groups and fluorine ions, as well as the complex bonding properties of rare earth elements. We report Raman vibrational and Nd3+ luminescence (4F3/2→4I9/2, 4F3/2→4I11/2, and 4F5/2+2H9/2→4I9/2) spectra of natural bastnäsite-(Ce) to 50 GPa at 300 K. Two phase transitions are observed under compression. Bastnäsite-I remains the stable phase up to 25 GPa, where it undergoes a subtle phase transition to bastnäsite-II. This is likely produced by a change in symmetry of the carbonate ion. Bastnäsite-II transforms to bastnäsite-III at ~38 GPa, as demonstrated by changes in the luminescence spectra. This second transition is particularly evident within the 4F3/2→4I9/2 luminescent transitions, and it appears that a new rare earth element site is generated at this phase change. This transition is also accompanied by modest changes in both the Raman spectra and two sets of luminescent transitions. Despite these transformations, the carbonate unit remains a stable, threefold-coordinated unit throughout this pressure range, with a possible increase in its distortion. Correspondingly, the rare-earth element site(s) appears to persist in quasi-ninefold coordination as well, implying that the general bonding configuration in bastnäsite is at least metastable over a ~30% compression range. All pressure-induced transitions are reversible, with some hysteresis, reverting to its ambient pressure phase on decompression.


1976 ◽  
Vol 54 (16) ◽  
pp. 1699-1701 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Schlesinger ◽  
G. W. F. Drake

The phonon side-band peak near 490 cm−1 accompanying 4f → 5d transitions of ten triply-ionized rare earth elements in the CaF2 matrix and some of the corresponding peaks in SrF2 and BaF2 are investigated. All the data taken together confirm an earlier identification of the peaks as a local mode associated with the rare earth ion and its nearest-neighbour fluorine ions.


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