Unconventional uranium in China's phosphate rock: Review and outlook
Autor: | Lukas Zenk, Ziying Li, Mohamed H. Taha, Gerald Steiner, Yanhua Zheng, Jun Zhong, Lee Barker, Ahmed Hussein, Wang Menglai, Xiaodong Liu, Martin Bertau, Harikrishnan Tulsidas, Adil El-Yahyaoui, Bernhard Geissler, Delei Shang, Michael C. Mew, Nils Haneklaus, Liliya Satalkina, Yuan Yao, Huidong Deng |
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Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
chemistry
Phosphorite Renewable Energy Sustainability and the Environment Environmental protection 020209 energy 0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineering Environmental science chemistry.chemical_element Heavy metals 02 engineering and technology Natural uranium Uranium China |
Zdroj: | Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews. 140:110740 |
ISSN: | 1364-0321 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.rser.2021.110740 |
Popis: | Some phosphate rock contains elevated concentrations of natural uranium. China is the largest phosphate rock producing country in the world and will soon have the largest uranium requirements in the world as well. Most phosphate rock deposits in China show low uranium concentrations (20–30 mg/kg) so that the recovery of radiotoxic heavy metals is neither economically appropriate nor ecologically necessary. China does, however, also have elevated uranium concentrations (≥90 mg/kg) in phosphate rock deposits in Sichuan and Yunnan. We estimate that China could have recovered nearly 648 metric tU (1.43 million lb U3O8) from those mines in 2016. The amount corresponds to 9.7% of the total reported uranium requirements in this year or 39.3% of reported domestic uranium production in 2016. The future uranium recovery potential may be even higher in total numbers (1158 tU or 3.01 million lb U3O8 in 2030). The main reason are potentially increasing imports of phosphate rock from large exporting countries such as Morocco that show higher average uranium content. In addition, medium- to lower-grade domestic phosphate rock resources with larger shares of accompanying heavy metals, that include rare earths and uranium, will have to be processed. Although the uranium supply for China is currently not at risk, the supply security could be further increased by obtaining unconventional uranium from domestic and imported phosphate rock. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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