Greetings everyone!
I am new here and I have limited direct experience in this area.
I suppose you all get tired of hearing of the next magic leaching solution, but has anyone heard of this new company and their leachant:
https://enviroleach.com
https://resource-recycling.com/e-scrap/2017/09/08/metals-recovery-strategy-comes-us/
I read some earlier thread about a vinegar solution from University of Saskatchewan and a thread of some other "environmentally-friendly" leachant, both of which turned out from my understanding to merely be derivations of the standard cyanide leaching process.
The Enviroleach process they state uses only FDA (US govt screening process) approved ingredients with no acids or cyanide. A large American company called Jabil is building a plant in Tennessee to run their process/leachant.
They are short on information given they are still filing their patent. Was just wondering if anyone had any potential insights or more information.
Best,
-nrg91720
I am new here and I have limited direct experience in this area.
I suppose you all get tired of hearing of the next magic leaching solution, but has anyone heard of this new company and their leachant:
https://enviroleach.com
https://resource-recycling.com/e-scrap/2017/09/08/metals-recovery-strategy-comes-us/
I read some earlier thread about a vinegar solution from University of Saskatchewan and a thread of some other "environmentally-friendly" leachant, both of which turned out from my understanding to merely be derivations of the standard cyanide leaching process.
The Enviroleach process they state uses only FDA (US govt screening process) approved ingredients with no acids or cyanide. A large American company called Jabil is building a plant in Tennessee to run their process/leachant.
They are short on information given they are still filing their patent. Was just wondering if anyone had any potential insights or more information.
Best,
-nrg91720