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Copper wire formed into a ring is photographed floating on muddy sludge.

Valuable copper is found in sludge which was previously sent to be landfill.

Salvaging valuable metals from sludge

Mineral processing techniques that are normally used to concentrate ore are being adapted by CSIRO to recover valuable metals from recycling plants and reduce the toxicity of the resultant sludge.

  • 8 January 2008 | Updated 14 October 2011

Each year, tens of thousands of old car bodies, washing machines and refrigerators disappear into huge shredding machines at metal-recycling plants in Australia’s capital cities.

A sludgy mess

Electromagnets extract the large steel fragments for melting in electric arc furnaces.

Further separation processes remove larger fragments of non-magnetic metals, like brass and aluminium.

The separation process leaves large volumes of watery sludge containing small particles of:

Recyclers may be able to use mineral processing to extract valuable metals from recycling sludge.
  • steel
  • copper
  • brass
  • lead
  • aluminium
  • other non-metallic compounds.

Recyclers typically send the sludge for disposal in landfill or toxic-waste dumps.

A new approach

CSIRO’s Mr Warren Bruckard has been investigating whether metals recyclers could apply mineral processing techniques to recover potentially valuable products from the sludge, while at the same time reducing its volume and toxicity.

Mr Bruckard’s team conducted a detailed analysis of sludge from a recycling plant operated by Smorgon Steel subsidiary Metalcorp Recyclers at Laverton, in Victoria.

The team determined that it contained approximately 3.1 kilogram of recoverable copper and 33 kilograms of clean steel per tonne of dry feed.

The proposed process for extracting the metal involves the following steps:

  • hydraulic classifying to remove material such as plastic, foam and rubber
  • magnetic separation to concentrate clean steel
  • gravity concentration in a jig to separate low-density materials like calcite and glass from the high-density metals like copper, lead and brass.

Paying for itself

Mr Bruckard said that at some metal recycling plants the value of the recovered products could more than offset the cost of installing and operating the add-on process in the future.

He believes metal recyclers will use this or similar technology in the future, as landfill costs continue to rise and legislation to regulate toxic wastes becomes more stringent.

Learn more about CSIRO's work in Sustainable Manufacturing.

Commercial Information

Project: Recovery of valuable metals from discarded recycling sludge

Solution: Application of mineral processing techniques to the recycling industry

Opportunities: Recyclers can reduce landfill costs and the toxicity of waste sludge while increasing the recovery of valuable metals

Area involved: CSIRO Minerals

Principal scientist: Mr Warren Bruckard

Contact Information

Mr Warren Bruckard

Research Program Leader - Mineral Processing and Agglomeration

Phone: 61 3 9545 8566

Email: Warren.Bruckard@csiro.au

Mr Bob Chamberlain

Communication Manager

Phone: 61 7 3327 4469

Alt Phone: 61 7 3327 4444

Email: Bob.Chamberlain@csiro.au

Explore CSIRO

Community

CSIRO aims to establish and build relationships with members of the community. We welcome people of all ages to come and explore our facilities, holiday programs and public events.

Contact

Phone:

1300 363 400

Email:

enquiries@csiro.au

More contact options

About CSIRO

CSIRO, the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, is Australia's national science agency and one of the largest and most diverse research agencies in the world.

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