Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"recovery" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Using an insect for sustainable waste management of a superabundant bird López-Manzano C; Mahdjoub H; Arce-Valdés LR; Khelifa R; 41719861
BIOLOGY
2 Toward a Sustainable Future: A Holistic Environmental, Social, and Economic Assessment of Industrial Recycling for All-Solid-State Batteries with Oxide-Based Electrolytes Wang Z; Tian X; Zhao S; Zhang P; An C; 41073076
ENCS
3 Feasibility analysis of recycling and repurposing end-of-life vehicle batteries in isolated island areas: A case study in British Columbia, Canada Wang Z; Lyu L; Huang G; An C; 40795495
ENCS
4 Electro-washing of pipelines spills: On-site strategies for different soil matrices Rajaei E; Elektorowicz M; 40614426
ENCS
5 Sustainable Recovery of Critical Minerals from Wastes by Green Biosurfactants: A Review Deravian B; Mulligan CN; 40509347
ENCS
6 Recyclability and recovery of carbon from waste printed circuit boards within a circular economy perspective: A review Wang Z; Huang G; An C; 39862821
ENCS
7 The Effects of Weekly Levels of Supervisor Support and Workload on Next Week Levels of Well-Being, Satisfaction, and Performance as Mediated by Weekend Work Recovery Cheyroux P; Morin AJS; Colombat P; Blechman Y; Gillet N; 39676703
CONCORDIA
8 Electroacupuncture Reduces Heart Rate and Perceived Exertion During a Bike Test: A Preliminary Analysis Gaudet E; Castonguay T; Fortin M; Dover G; 39457342
HKAP
9 A unified stochastic SIR model driven by Lévy noise with time-dependency Easlick T; Sun W; 39027117
MATHSTATS
10 A longitudinal person-centered investigation of the multidimensional nature of employees' perceptions of challenge and hindrance demands at work Gillet N; Morin AJS; Fernet C; Austin S; Huyghebaert-Zouaghi T; 38425154
CONCORDIA
11 Developing a collaborative and sustainable return to work program for employees with common mental disorders: a participatory research with public and private organizations Corbière M; Mazaniello-Chézol M; Lecomte T; Guay S; Panaccio A; 34086528
PSYCHOLOGY
12 A person-centered perspective on the factors associated with the work recovery process. Gillet N, Morin AJS, Mokounkolo R, Réveillère C, Fouquereau E 33380222
PSYCHOLOGY

 

Title:Sustainable Recovery of Critical Minerals from Wastes by Green Biosurfactants: A Review
Authors:Deravian BMulligan CN
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40509347/
DOI:10.3390/molecules30112461
Publication:Molecules (Basel, Switzerland)
Keywords:biosurfactantscritical mineralsgreen analytical chemistryheavy metalsmetal recoveryresource circularitysustainable extraction
PMID:40509347 Category: Date Added:2025-06-13
Dept Affiliation: ENCS
1 Department of Building, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Concordia University, 1455 de Maisonneuve Blvd. W., Montreal, QC H3G 1M8, Canada.

Description:

Biosurfactants have emerged as promising agents for environmental remediation due to their ability to complex, chelate, and remove heavy metals from contaminated environments. This review evaluates their potential for recovering critical minerals from waste materials to support renewable energy production, emphasizing the role of biosurfactant-metal interactions in advancing green recovery technologies and enhancing resource circularity. Among biosurfactants, rhamnolipids demonstrate a high affinity for metals such as lead, cadmium, and copper due to their strong stability constants and functional groups like carboxylates, with recovery efficiencies exceeding 75% under optimized conditions. Analytical techniques, including Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry (ICP-MS), Fourier-Transform Infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), and Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM), are instrumental in assessing recovery efficiency and interaction mechanisms. The review introduces a Green Chemistry Metrics Framework for evaluating biosurfactant-based recovery processes, revealing 70-85% lower Environmental Factors compared to conventional methods. Significant research gaps exist in applying biosurfactants for extraction of metals like lithium and cobalt from batteries and other waste materials. Advancing biosurfactant-based technologies hold promise for efficient, sustainable metal recovery and resource circularity, addressing both resource scarcity and environmental protection challenges simultaneously.





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