Literature DB >> 28191957

Toward Financially Viable Phytoextraction and Production of Plant-Based Palladium Catalysts.

Zakuan A S Harumain1,2, Helen L Parker3, Andrea Muñoz García3, Michael J Austin3, Con Robert McElroy3, Andrew J Hunt3, James H Clark3, John A Meech4, Christopher W N Anderson5, Luca Ciacci6, T E Graedel6, Neil C Bruce1, Elizabeth L Rylott1.   

Abstract

Although a promising technique, phytoextraction has yet to see significant commercialization. Major limitations include metal uptake rates and subsequent processing costs. However, it has been shown that liquid-culture-grown Arabidopsis can take up and store palladium as nanoparticles. The processed plant biomass has catalytic activity comparable to that of commercially available catalysts, creating a product of higher value than extracted bulk metal. We demonstrate that the minimum level of palladium in Arabidopsis dried tissues for catalytic activity comparable to commercially available 3% palladium-on-carbon catalysts was achieved from dried plant biomass containing between 12 and 18 g·kg-1 Pd. To advance this technology, species suitable for in-the-field application: mustard, miscanthus, and 16 willow species and cultivars, were tested. These species were able to grow, and take up, palladium from both synthetic and mine-sourced tailings. Although levels of palladium accumulation in field-suitable species are below that required for commercially available 3% palladium-on-carbon catalysts, this study both sets the target, and is a step toward, the development of field-suitable species that concentrate catalytically active levels of palladium. Life cycle assessment on the phytomining approaches described here indicates that the use of plants to accumulate palladium for industrial applications has the potential to decrease the overall environmental impacts associated with extracting palladium using present-day mining processes.

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Year:  2017        PMID: 28191957     DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.6b04821

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Sci Technol        ISSN: 0013-936X            Impact factor:   9.028


  2 in total

1.  Industry-Informed Workshops to Develop Graduate Skill Sets in the Circular Economy Using Systems Thinking.

Authors:  Louise Summerton; James H Clark; Glenn A Hurst; Peter D Ball; Elizabeth L Rylott; Nicola Carslaw; Julia Creasey; Jane Murray; Jeffrey Whitford; Brian Dobson; Helen F Sneddon; Joe Ross; Pete Metcalf; C Robert McElroy
Journal:  J Chem Educ       Date:  2019-11-01       Impact factor: 2.979

2.  Synthesis and application of tuneable carbon-silica composites from the microwave pyrolysis of waste paper for selective recovery of gold from acidic solutions.

Authors:  Konstantina Sotiriou; Nontipa Supanchaiyamat; Tengyao Jiang; Intuorn Janekarn; Andrea Muñoz García; Vitaliy L Budarin; Duncan J MacQuarrie; Andrew J Hunt
Journal:  RSC Adv       Date:  2020-07-02       Impact factor: 4.036

  2 in total

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