High-purity recycling of hematite and Zn/Cu mixture from waste smelting slag

In this study, Zn/Cu-bearing smelting slag was recycled via an integrated acid dissolution and hematite precipitation method. The slag was dissolved in nitric acid to generate an acid solution containing 23.5 g/L Fe, 4.45 g/L Zn and 2.81 g/L Cu, which was subjected to hydrothermal treatment with the addition of levulinic acid (LA). More than 99.95% of the initial Fe content was removed as hematite particles with diameters of approximately 200 nm, and the residual Fe concentration in the acid was 0.43 mg/L. The generated hematite contained 97.3% Fe2O3, 0.64% ZnO and 0.58% CuO. Greater than 99% of the initial Zn and Cu was retained in the acid and further precipitated as Zn/Cu-bearing solids by adjusting the solution pH to 9. The precipitated Zn/Cu-bearing solids contained 33.6% Zn and 21.7% Cu, whereas the Fe content was less than 0.2%. This paper is the first report of an environmentally friendly approach for recycling smelting slag without generating any hazardous waste.

removal of Fe from the leaching acid, the residual Fe was highly concentrated (nearly 1.5 g/L); hence, further separation was required before heavy metal recycling 17 .
The objective of this study was to develop a novel route to recycle heavy metals (e.g., Zn and Cu) from smelting slag without generating any secondary waste. The study also aimed to optimize the recycling conditions to obtain high-purity Zn/Cu products.

Materials and methods
Smelting slag treatment. Smelting wastewater was discharged from the electroplating workshop of Sanhe Company (Changchun, Jilin, China), in which the residual Zn and Cu concentrations were 30.7 and 19.3 mg/L, respectively. The smelting wastewater was treated by coagulation through the addition of commercial FeCl 3 6H 2 O. Crystallized FeCl 3 6H 2 O was added to approximately 2 t of wastewater, which was stored in a flocculation tank, at a dosage of approximately 0.8 g/L. Subsequently, the wastewater was adjusted to a pH of 7.5 through the addition of caustic soda under constant stirring at 70-90 rpm for 1 h followed by 24 h of precipitation. A yellowish precipitate was generated at the bottom of the tank, which was pumped to a plate and frame filter press (XAMY6/450-30U, Runnan-Shanghai, China) to mechanically dewater. Thus, brownish sludge cake was generated.
Samples were taken from the smelting slag, and then the sampled slag was completely dissolved in nitric acid solution at room temperature for one week. The leaching solution contained 23.5 g/L Fe, 4.45 g/L Zn, 2.81 g/L Cu, 61.8 g/L NO 3 and 3.75 g/L Cl -.
fe separation experiments. Highly  At an M LA /M Fe ratio of 1, nearly 100% Fe removal was achieved. Thus, the residual Zn and Cu in the supernatant was recycled by directly adjusting the supernatant to a pH of 9 through the addition of 5 M NaOH. The generated deposit was collected and then washed three times with deionized water, followed by drying at 105 °C for 5 h. The Fe, Zn and Cu concentrations in the residual supernatant were also determined by ICP-OES.
All experiments in this study were performed in triplicate, and the average of the values was reported. Various sets of the experimental data were subjected to one-way analysis of variance using Microsoft Excel (v. 2016, Microsoft, USA), and the differences between the sets of data were not statistically significant. characterization. The deposited particles were characterized using scanning electron microscopy (SEM, JSM-6400, Jeol, Japan), X-ray diffraction (XRD, Rigaku, Rint2200, Japan) and X-ray fluorescence (XRF, S4-Explorer, Bruker, Germany). The nitrate and nitrite in the supernatant were determined by ion chromatography (881 Pro, Metrohm, Switzerland). The pH value and total organic carbon (TOC) were measured using a pH meter (S210-S, Mettler Toledo, USA) and a TOC analyzer (TOC 500, Shimadzu, Japan), respectively.

Results and discussion
optimization of LA dosage. Fe was efficiently separated from the leaching acid, as shown in Fig. 1.
Without LA, the Fe removal rate reached 88.3%, whereas the removal rates of Zn and Cu were both less than 0.5% ( Fig. 1(A)). Additionally, the nitrate concentration decreased from 61.8 g/L to 56.3 g/L ( Fig. 1(B)), and the solution pH slightly decreased from 0.4 to 0.2. By adding LA, the total Fe removal rate significantly increased to 98.2% at a molar ratio (M LA /M Fe ) of 0.5, peaked at nearly 100% at a molar ratio of 1, and slightly decreased to 99.5% at a molar ratio of 2. Accordingly, the Zn and Cu removal rates slightly increased from 0.52% and 0.66% at a molar ratio of 0.5 to 0.78% and 0.84% at the molar ratio of 1, whereas they substantially increased to 21.5% and 14.5% at a molar ratio of 2. Therefore, the optimal molar ratio was 1 for highly efficient separation of Fe from leaching acid, in which the Fe removal rate was nearly 100% (the residual Fe concentration was 0.43 mg/L) and the Zn and Cu removal rates were both less than 1%.
The decreases in the TOC and nitrate content were also observed. For instance, at a molar ratio of 1, the concentration of the residual nitrate was 8.3 g/L, whereas the concentration of the residual TOC was 0.6 g/L, suggesting that the added LA was inadequate to completely oxidize nitrate. When the molar ratio increased from 1 to 2, the nitrate concentration decreased to 0.47 g/L, whereas the residual TOC concentration increased to 9.2 g/L, demonstrating that approximately 99.2% of the nitrate was removed by the excessive dosage of LA. As the LA dosage increased, the solution pH increased to 2.5 at a molar ratio of 1 and further increased to 3.6 at a molar ratio of 2, indicating that H + was involved in the redox reaction between LA and nitrate. The variation of TOC and nitrate were subjected to the reaction between LA and nitrate under hydrothermal conditions (these conditions will be discussed in Section 3.4).
Without the addition of LA, Fe was removed as hematite particles (Fig. 2, molar ratio = 0) with diameters of 300-500 nm ( Fig. 3(A)). After adding LA, sharp peaks of hematite were also observed in the curves of the particles generated at molar ratios of 0.5 and 1 (Fig. 2); however, the diameter of the particles gradually decreased  www.nature.com/scientificreports www.nature.com/scientificreports/ to approximately 200 nm as the molar ratio increased to 1 (Fig. 3(B,C)). A previous study revealed that LA and its oxidized intermediates were electrostatically adsorbed on the positively charged surface of hematite particles during hydrothermal treatment, which inhibited the aggregation and crystal growth of hematite particles and resulted in smaller hematite particles than those observed without the addition of LA 19 . When the molar ratio was 2, the obtained particles showed sharp peaks of hematite and new peaks at 2θ = 18.8° and 30.3° corresponding to humboldtine (Fig. 2, molar ratio = 2); hence, the obtained particles were a mixture of spherical hematite particles and small humboldtine chips (Fig. 3(D)).
To analyze the components of the generated hematite with the optimal LA dosage, an XRF experiment was performed (Fig. 4). The precipitated hematite contained 97.3% Fe 2 O 3 , 0.64% ZnO and 0.58% CuO, which is highly purified and can subsequently be used as a raw material in the dye and electronic industries. optimization of the hydrothermal treatment time. The time course of Fe removal from the leaching acid with different hydrothermal treatment times was investigated, as shown in Fig. 5. The Fe removal rate increased to 82.3% after 0.5 h of treatment, then further increased to 99.2% after 1 h of treatment, and became steady at nearly 100% as the treatment time extended to 6 h. The Zn and Cu removal rates were 0.31% and 0.43% after 0.5 h of treatment, followed by slight increases to 0.78% and 0.84% after 1 h of treatment, and then remained  Recycling of cu/Zn-bearing particles. After Fe was removed from the leaching solution, the residual Zn and Cu concentrations were 4.42 and 2.78 g/L, respectively; these values are approximately 140 times those in the smelting wastewater. The residual Cu and Zn were recovered as the Cu/Zn-bearing irregular aggregates (Fig. 8(A)) by adjusting the solution pH to 9. The Cu and Zn precipitated as a mixture of simonkolleite and paratacamite ( Fig. 8(B)), in which the relative weight percentages of Zn and Cu were 33.6% and 21.7%, respectively, whereas that of Fe was less than 0.2%. These results demonstrated that the Cu/Zn mixture was highly purified.
Separation mechanism of fe from the leaching acid. Fe was abundant in the leaching solution and was spontaneously hydrolyzed in three steps under hydrothermal conditions. First, Fe was hydrolyzed to weakly crystallized Fe oxyhydroxides (Eq. (1)), such as Fe 2+ OH, Fe + (OH) 2 and Fe(OH) 3 20,21 . Second, the conjunction of two adjacent hydroxyl groups on each Fe oxyhydroxide occurred, to release one water molecule, with the formation of an Fe-O-Fe bond 22,23 . Third, as the above reaction continued, akageneite was generated and further transformed into hematite (Eq. (2)). www.nature.com/scientificreports www.nature.com/scientificreports/ To further analyze the hydrolysis of Fe, the leaching solution was hydrothermally treated without LA according to the method in Section 2.2, and then the particles generated after 0.2 h of treatment were characterized by XRD (Fig. 9). The typical peaks of Fe 2 O(OH) 3  During Fe hydrolysis, OHwas involved in the formation of Fe oxyhydroxides. The residual H + led to a decrease in solution pH from 0.4 to 0.2 ( Fig. 1(C)). In the leaching acid, the coprecipitation of Fe and Zn/Cu did not occur. When the free Zn and Cu were coordinated on the surface hydroxyl group (≡Fe-O-H) of the Fe oxyhydroxides, the polymerization of two adjacent Fe oxyhydroxides was inhibited. However, H + was rich in the leaching acid and easily replaced the coordinated Zn/Cu on the Fe oxyhydroxides, which regenerated the hydroxyl group, thereby promoting the polymerization reaction of Fe oxyhydroxides with hematite as the final product. During the hydrothermal treatment process, H + accumulated in the acid and finally remained constant, in which the hydrolysis of Fe was in equilibrium, which led to a relatively high level of residual Fe. In addition, nitrate was also hydrothermally decomposed to NO 2 and O 2 24 via Eq. (3), which caused a decrease in nitrate concentration ( Fig. 1(B)).
When LA was introduced in the leaching acid, the redox reaction between LA and nitrate occurred via Eq. (4). The carboxyl group on the side chain of the LA molecule was prone to losing electrons via a decarboxylation reaction with the generation of 2-butanone and methyl vinyl ketone 25 , which was further oxidized to oxalic acid with CO 2 and H 2 O as the final product. After hydrothermal reaction with an M LA /M Fe ratio of 2, the supernatant was collected, and then the residual concentrations of 2-butanone and methyl vinyl ketone in the supernatant were determined by headspace-gas chromatography (HS-GC, QP2010-Ultra, Shimadzu, Japan) following the method of Gong et al. 26 , whereas the oxalic acid concentration was detected by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC, LA-20, Shimadzu, Japan) in accordance with Pelin et al. 27 . The concentrations of 2-butanone and methyl vinyl ketone were 23.9 and 0.07 mg/L, respectively, which were both lower than that of oxalic acid (282.4 mg/L). This demonstrated the generation of 2-butanone, methyl vinyl ketone and oxalic acid in the reaction between LA and nitrate. Similar intermediates of 2-butanone and methyl vinyl ketone were also observed in the oxidative decarboxylation of LA by Ag + /S 2 O 8 2after autoclaving at 100 °C for 0.5 h 26 . As the LA continued to be consumed, both TOC and nitrate concentrations decreased, whereas the solution pH increased, which promoted the further hydrolysis of Fe to Fe oxyhydroxides. The newly generated Fe oxyhydroxides were steadily transformed to akageneite in the presence of a sufficient amount of Cl -. Figure 10 shows that the initial concentration of Clwas 3.75 g/L, which decreased to 3.17 g/L after 0.5 h of hydrothermal treatment and then gradually increased to 3.63 g/L as the hydrothermal treatment time extended to 6 h. These findings suggest that Clwas involved in the formation of akageneite.  Akageneite has a tetragonal structure, in which the inner tunnels parallel to the c-axis of the tetragonal lattice are partially occupied by Cl -, Fand OH -28 for structural crystal stability 29,30 . When the hydrothermal treatment time was longer than 2 h, the in situ conversion of akaganeite to hematite occurred with the release of water molecules and Clin the tunnels 31,32 , which was in agreement with the release of Clin the conversion of akageneite to hematite (Fig. 10). Therefore, the Fe precipitated as Fe oxyhydroxides and finally converted to hematite with akageneite as the intermediate.  www.nature.com/scientificreports www.nature.com/scientificreports/ US$ 1496.7. However, costly LA can be replaced by a cheap organic acid, and the product of the hematite and Zn/ Cu mixture is highly marketable, which can reduce the cost of slag reutilization. Therefore, the processing method for recycling Zn/Cu from smelting slag has potential applications.  www.nature.com/scientificreports www.nature.com/scientificreports/ The method described in this study has two advantages in the disposal of smelting slag. One advantage is the effective removal of Fe from the leaching acid, which produces hematite nanoparticles with a purity of 97.3%. The other advantage is the low residual Fe content and high retention of Zn and Cu in the leaching acid. Thus, the highly purified Zn/Cu product was recycled without generating any secondary waste. The recycled Zn/Cu precipitates contained 33.6% Zn and 21.7% Cu with less than 0.2% Fe. The composition meets the guidelines for the active pharmaceutical ingredients of commercial Zn/Cu oxyhydroxide 33,34 , demonstrating the economic value of the recycled Zn/Cu mixture. In addition, the Zn/Cu precipitates can be easily divided into two purified solutions (Zn-bearing or Cu-bearing) via purification methods, including liquid membrane 35 , resin extraction 36 , or solvent extraction 37 , and then directly reused as raw materials in the electroplating process. Other heavy metals, such as Ni, Pb and Cd, showed similar chemical performance to Zn and Cu. These other metals can also be precipitated from wastewater as slag through the addition of a polyferric chloride flocculant, which can be recycled to produce highly purified heavy metal-bearing products. Furthermore, the removal of Fe impurities in this study may shed light on promoting the extraction efficiency of valuable materials (e.g., rare earth metals) from metal-bearing solutions and wastewater. Future studies should focus on the separation of Fe with the addition of low-cost organic matter and the effectiveness of recycling other heavy metals.
conclusion Zn/Cu-bearing smelting wastewater was treated by chemical coagulation with polyferric chloride to generate Zn/Cu smelting slag. The slag was dissolved in nitric acid to generate an Fe/Zn/Cu-bearing solution. Through an optimized hydrothermal treatment (6 h), Fe was precipitated as hematite nanoparticles with a purity of 97.3%, and the residual Fe concentration in the acid was 0.43 mg/L; the removal rate was less than 1% for both Zn and Cu. The concentrations of Zn and Cu in the acid were 4.42 and 2.78 g/L, respectively; these concentrations are approximately 140 times those in the smelting wastewater. Zn/Cu in the acid was further precipitated by adjusting the solution pH to 9, and the final relative weight percentages of Zn and Cu were 33.6% and 21.7%, respectively, whereas the Fe content was less than 0.2%.