Metals and rare Earth’s elements in landfills: case studiesShow others and affiliations
2016 (English)In: 3rd Int. Symposium on Enhanced Landfill Mining, Lisboa, 8-10/2/2016, 2016Conference paper, Published paper (Refereed)
Abstract [en]
Landfills are considered as places where the life cycle of products ends and materialshave been “disposed forever”. The landfill mining (LFM) approach can deal with formerdumpsites and this material may become important for circular economy perspectiveswithin the concept “Beyond the zero waste”. Potential material recovery should includeperspectives of recycling of critical industrial metals where rare Earth elements (REEs)are playing more and more important role. Real-time applied LFM projects in the BalticRegion have shown the potential of fine-grained fractions (including clay and colloidalmatter) of excavated waste as storage of considerably large amounts of valuable metalsand REEs. Analytical screening studies have extended a bit further the understanding offine fraction contents of excavated, separated and screened waste in a circular economyperspective. The Swedish Institute and Latvian Research Program “Res Prod” supportedthe research.
Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
2016.
National Category
Environmental Sciences
Research subject
Environmental Science, Environmental Chemistry
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:mdh:diva-57910OAI: oai:DiVA.org:mdh-57910DiVA, id: diva2:1651767
Conference
3rd International Academic Symposium on Enhanced Landfill Mining, Lisboa, Portugal, 8-10/2/2016
2022-04-132022-04-132022-04-13Bibliographically approved