Electrolysis is a common form of electrochemical refining. In an electrolysis process, the ore is dissolved in an aqueous or non-aqueous solution or melted in an electrolytic furnace. Once dissolved or melted, the ore dissociates into ionic species, forming an electrolyte. The metallic components of the ore to be extracted become positively charged cations. The remaining components, typically oxygen and halogens, become negatively charged anions. To extract the metal from the ore, an electric potential is applied across two electrodes that are immersed in the electrolyte. The metallic ions are thereby attracted to the negatively charged cathode, where they combine with electrons and are deposited as metal. The counter ions, most typically oxygen and halogens, are driven to the positively charged anode and evolve as waste gases.
Oxygen-ion-conducting membranes, such as yttria-stabilized zirconia, have been used in electrolytic metal extraction processes and permit the extraction of pure metals from their respective oxides. A metal oxide dissolved in a suitable molten electrolyte is separated from the anode by oxygen-ion-conducting membrane. When a potential is generated between the cathode (in contact with the electrolyte) and the anode (in contact with the oxygen-ion-conducting membrane), and the dissociation potential of the oxides are exceeded, the oxygen species of the electrolyte is transported across the ion-conducting membrane and is oxidized at the anode, and the metallic species are reduced at the cathode. This electrochemical cell is referred to as a solid oxide membrane (SOM) cell.
The oxidizing environment of the anode limits the available choices for an anode. In order to reduce the oxidizing environment of the anode, a consumable carbon source or consumable reducing gas such as carbon monoxide (CO) and/or hydrogen is typically continuously fed over the anode to getter or react with the oxygen generated at the anode. This reduces the corrosive oxidative environment at the anode; however, reducing gases and in particular hydrogen are expensive and can add significantly to the cost of metal extraction. Due to the amount of reductant gas required, H2 gas has to be fed in continuously. This puts technique challenges on hydrogen transportation, storage and safety.
An electrolysis cell useful in the synthesis of metals from their respective oxides is desired; in particular, anodes that are stable under oxidizing conditions of the anode are desired. An electrolysis system that does not require a reductant is desired.
The present invention describes an oxygen producing inert anode. The anode eliminates the need to use hydrogen or CO as getters to react with oxygen. This results in a “greener” SOM process as it can be driven by electricity alone.
In one aspect of the invention, an electrolysis system for generating a metal and molecular oxygen is provided that includes a container for receiving a metal oxide containing a metallic species to be extracted, a cathode positioned to contact a metal oxide housed within the container; an oxygen-ion-conducting membrane positioned to contact a metal oxide housed within the container; an anode in contact with the oxygen-ion-conducting membrane and spaced apart from a metal oxide housed within the container, said anode selected from the group consisting of liquid metal silver or its alloys (Silver-Copper, Silver-Tin etc.), oxygen stable electronic oxides, oxygen stable cermets, and stabilized zirconia composites with oxygen stable electronic oxides.
In another aspect of the invention, a method of metal extraction is provided that includes (a) providing a cell comprising a metal oxide-containing electrolyte comprising a metallic species to be extracted, said electrolyte in communication with a cathode and an oxygen-ion-conducting membrane; and an anode in communication with the oxygen-ion-conducting membrane, said anode selected from the group consisting of liquid metal silver or its alloys (Silver-Copper, Silver-Tin etc.), oxygen stable electronic oxides, oxygen stable cermets, and stabilized zirconia composites with oxygen stable electronic oxides; and (b) applying a potential across the cathode and anode that is greater than the dissociation potential of the metal oxide, wherein the metallic species are reduced at the cathode and the oxygen species are oxidized at the anode to form molecular oxygen.
The foregoing and various other aspects, features, and advantages of the present invention, as well as the invention itself, may be more fully appreciated with reference to the following detailed description of the invention when considered in connection with the following drawings. The drawings are presented for the purpose of illustration only and are not intended to be limiting of the invention, in which:
An environmentally sound solid-oxide-membrane (SOM) electrolysis system can efficiently synthesize metals and alloys directly from their oxide ores with minimum feed-material preparation and produce oxygen gas or water vapor as the major byproduct. In particular, high-energy-content metals, e.g., metal oxides having large dissociation energies such as magnesium, tantalum and titanium, are synthesized directly from their respective oxides (dissolved in fluoride-based molten fluxes) by employing oxygen-ion-conducting solid electrolyte with an oxygen-producing anode and an inert current collector. During electrolysis, metal cations are reduced at the cathode and molecular oxygen gas is generated at the anode. No gettering gas is required and the oxygen is collected at the anode.
Exemplary oxygen-producing anodes include liquid silver (Ag) or its alloys (Silver-Copper, Silver-Tin etc.), cermets, electronic oxides and composites thereof with stabilized zirconia. The oxygen-producing anode is stable under the oxidizing and high temperature (e.g., >1000° C.) conditions of the anode. Suitable oxygen-producing anodes possess high electronic conductivity (>10 S/cm) and charge transfer/surface exchange kinetics (>10-7 cm/s), are stable in the anodic gas environments and are chemically, mechanically and structurally compatible with the oxygen-ion-conducting membrane.
In one or more embodiments, the oxygen-producing anode is liquid silver and no gettering agent, e.g., H2/CO, is required. The oxygen entering the liquid silver anode through the oxygen-ion-conducting membrane evolves as oxygen gas since silver oxide is not stable at the operating temperature (1100-1300° C.).
In other embodiments, the oxygen producing inert anodes is a porous cermet. The cermet is a composite of an oxygen stable (noble) metal such as iridium or platinum and a stabilized zirconia. The noble metal is capable of withstanding the high temperatures during operation without melting. Stabilized zirconia may be a rare earth element- or alkaline earth-stabilized zirconia, such as zirconia stabilized with yttria, calcium oxide, scandium oxide and the like. The cermet anode is typically coated as a porous thin film on a support, which can be the oxygen-ion-conducting membrane. An exemplary cermet anode is about 20-40% porous to permit molecular diffusion of gases.
In other embodiments, the anode can be an oxygen stable electronic oxide such as strontium-doped lanthanum manganite (La1−xSrxMnO3 or LSM). Still other stable electronic oxides include A-site deficient acceptor-doped lanthanum ferrite and lanthanum cobaltite, e.g., La1−xAxFeO3 or La1−xAxCoO3. The anode materials may include one or more dopants from the group consisting of Ca, Ce, Pr, Nd, and Gd in the La site and from the group consisting of Ni, Cr, Mg, Al, and Mn in the Fe or Co site; Fe may also be used as a dopant in the cobalt site. The electronic oxide is typically coated as a porous thin film on a support, which can be the oxygen-ion-conducting membrane. An exemplary electronic oxide is about 20-40% porous to permit molecular diffusion of gases.
In still other embodiments, the oxygen-producing anode may be a composite anode including an electronic oxide as described above and a stabilize zirconia as described above. The composite anode is typically coated as a porous thin film on a support, which can be the oxygen-ion-conducting membrane. An exemplary anode is about 20-40% porous to permit molecular diffusion of gases.
The dopant materials and amounts for electronic oxides such as lanthanum ferrite and the lanthanum cobaltite may be selected to decrease the thermal expansion of the ceramic and to provide a closer thermal match to the stabilized zirconia. La(Ca,Ce,Sm,Pr,Gd,Nd)Fe(Mn,Ni,Al,Cr,Mg)O3−x and La(Ca,Ce,Sm,Pr,Gd,Nd)Co(Mn,Ni,Al,Cr,Mg,Fe)O3−x powders of varying compositions can synthesized by mixing high purity precursors of carbonates and oxides in appropriate stoichiometric ratios and calcining them at a temperature of 1200-1300° C. for 4 hours in air. The calcined powders can be lightly crushed using an alumina mortar and pestle and the calcination step can be repeated to complete the solid-state reaction. The lanthanum ferrite and lanthanum cobaltite cathode materials systems may be fabricated on the appropriate support material and are typically prepared on the oxygen-ion-conducting membrane. In one or more embodiments, the porous anode is supported on a YSZ membrane.
Suitable solid oxide electrolytes for use as the oxygen-ion-conducting membrane are solid solutions (i.e., solid “electrolytes”) formed between oxides containing divalent and trivalent cations such as alkaline earth oxides, e.g., calcium oxide, or rare earth oxides, e.g., scandium oxide, yttrium oxide, lanthanum oxide, etc., and oxides containing tetravalent cations such as zirconia, hafnia, thoria and ceria. The oxygen ion-conducting materials or phases may be an oxygen-ion- conductive mixed metal oxide having a fluorite structure. The oxygen ion conducting material may be a doped fluorite compound. The higher ionic conductivity is believed to be due to the existence of oxygen ion site vacancies. One oxygen ion vacancy occurs for each divalent or each two trivalent cations that are substituted for a tetravalent ion in the lattice.
Any of a large number of oxides such as rare earth doped zirconia-, ceria-, hafnia-, or thoria-based materials may be used as the solid oxide electrolyte. Some of the known solid oxide materials include rare earth or alkaline earth-doped zirconia-, ceria-, hafnia-, and thoria-based oxides, such as Y2O3-stabilized ZrO2 (YSZ), CaO-stabilized ZrO2, Sc2O3-stabilized ZrO2, Y2O3-stabilized CeO2, CaO-stabilized CeO, GaO-stabilized CeO2, ThO2, Y2O3-stabilized ThO2, or ThO2, ZrO2, CeO2, or HfO2 stabilized by addition of any one of the lanthanide oxides or CaO. Additional examples include strontium- and magnesium-doped lanthanum gallate (LSGM). Many other oxides are known which have demonstrated oxygen ion-conducting ability, which could be used as the oxygen-ion-conducting membrane. The solid oxide electrolyte membrane can be in any shape. One particularly convenient shape is tubular, with one end of the tube being closed. Another suitable shape is in the form of a flat sheet or incorporated into a container for holding the molten metal flux.
The system and method according to one or more embodiments of the present invention may be use to extract high energy content metals, such as magnesium. The current production methods for magnesium are either metallothermic reduction (magnetherm process) at high temperatures (1,600° C.) involving expensive metal reductant (FeSi) or electrolysis from a halide electrolyte bath that requires extensive and expensive feed-material preparation. Both these techniques are also energy intensive, have low yield and generate large quantities of waste reaction products harmful to the environment. In the SOM process, the oxide reduction is electrochemical and has efficiencies close to 100%. Unlike the current metallothermic and the electrolytic processes, the SOM is more economic and less energy intensive, and its process products are environmentally benign.
The individual half-cell reactions can be written as follows:
In this process the oxygen-ion-conducting membrane, shown here as YSZ, separates the inert cathode and the flux from the liquid metal anode or the oxygen-producing anode. The Mg-containing flux has high ionic conductivity, high oxide solubility and low viscosity. In the exemplary system of
Liquid silver (Ag (l)) electrode serves as a medium to carry out the charge-transfer reaction involving oxygen ions and soluble oxygen at the YSZ/silver interface followed by oxygen gas evolution as shown in the above figure. Liquid metal anodes such as silver have low vapor pressure, high oxygen solubility and high oxygen diffusivity in the temperature range of interest. Other oxygen-producing anodes that are stable under the oxidizing conditions of the anode may be used. Such anodes include cermets, electronic oxides such as strontium-doped lanthanum manganite (La1−xSrxMnO3 or LSM), acceptor-doped lanthanum ferrite and lanthanum cobaltite materials, e.g., La1−xAxFeO3 or La1−xAxFeO3, and composites thereof with stabilized zirconia.
The anodic and cathodic reactions and the transport of various species are as shown in
The production of magnesium without reductant gases is described. Magnesium is produced by SOM process without any reductant feeding and it is expected that oxygen generated at the anode can be separated from the exhaust gas flow for other industrial applications. With reference to
During operation, a DC voltage greater than the dissociation potential of MgO was applied. Mg2+ cations moved toward the cathode, gained electrons and were reduced to Mg. At the experimental temperature 1150° C., Mg evolved as Mg gas. O2− anions in the slag, driven by electrochemical potential difference, passed through the YSZ membrane, which is an oxygen ion conductor, toward the anode. At the interface of membrane and silver, O2− lost electrons, and associated with each other to form O2 gas and the O2 gas was carried away by input Ar gas flow.
As shown in
After experiment, the stainless thin foil with the collected magnesium was pulled out from the condenser and the total weight was measured. Compared with the weight of the stainless steel sheet without magnesium condensation, it turned out that 8.1 grams of magnesium was produced. EDAX analysis shows the product is pure magnesium.
The cell was characterized using impedance spectroscopy, potentio-dynamic sweeps and potentio-static holds. The electrochemical instrumentation consists of a Princeton Applied Research (PAR) potentiostat (Model 263 A) and Solartron impedance analyzer (Model 1250 B). A KEPCO® power booster was used to increase the current limit of the potentiostat to 10 amps. Data acquisition and control of the above instruments was achieved with CorrWare® and Zplot® (software) from Scribner Associates (Southern Pines, N.C.). A Hewlett Packard power supply (Model 6033A) was used to apply a constant potential to the cell for electrolysis. The applied electrical potential and resulting current from the cell were logged at 1 second intervals using a Fluke Hydra® data logger (Model 2635A).
The MgO dissociation potential measurement for the above cell was determined based on the setup response to the slow potenio-dynamic sweep (scan rate=0.5 mV/sec) across the cell, as is shown in
This invention was made with Government Support under Contract Number DE-FC36-04GO14011 awarded by the Department of Energy. The Government has certain rights in the invention.
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PCT/US2006/027255 | 7/14/2006 | WO | 00 | 7/22/2008 |
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WO2007/011669 | 1/25/2007 | WO | A |
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