Subduction Zone
Veteran Member
"Red mud" is a by product of bauxite (Al2O3) mining. It is a mixture of iron, other rare earths and is extremely alkaline. It is usually just left in large pools because it is expensive to process. Now a way has been found to possibly make money from it. The mud is heated in the presence of a hydrogen plasma and it smelts the material leaving balls of iron behind. Even better, the highly alkaline mud is now neutral and can be used for making concrete and other products.
"Over the years, mining for aluminum has left behind billions of tons of the caustic sludge called red mud. But today in Nature, scientists report that a simple chemical process can extract another useful metal, iron, from this waste and render the remainder into a mostly benign substance useful for making concrete. If the process can be scaled up and proves cost-effective, it could help manufacturers convert waste into climate-friendlier steel, the researchers say.
“Very promising,” is how Yiannis Pontikes, a mechanical engineer at KU Leuven, describes the speed of the reactions and the purity of the product. But Pontikes, who was not involved in the research, cautions that the experiment was done on just one type of red mud, so it’s hard to generalize about its utility.
The first step in making aluminum is to mine a rock called bauxite, which is rich in aluminum oxide, also known as alumina. Extracting the alumina leaves behind waste called red mud that is highly alkaline and can also contain toxic heavy metals such as cadmium. Every year this process generates about 180 million tons of red mud. The stuff is left in reservoirs to dry, and dam breaks have unleashed devastating floods. Currently, only a tiny amount of the waste is treated to make it less caustic. After it’s been made harmless, the leftover substance can be used as fill-in construction material."
An interesting read and some possible good news for the environment.