This study presents a combined process of sulfide precipitation followed by hydrogen peroxide leaching for rhenium recovery from copper smelting waste acid under ambient temperature and pressure. The process first removed copper through selective sulfide precipitation, then achieved co-precipitation of rhenium and arsenic to obtain a rhenium-rich precipitate. Subsequently, exploration of rhenium-containing precipitate leaching using H2O2 solution was conducted under isothermal conditions at 20 °C. The effects of H2O2 concentration, liquid-to-solid ratio, acidity, and leaching time rhenium extraction efficiency were examined systematically. The optimal leaching conditions were determined as: H2O2 concentration of 150 g/L, liquid-to-solid ratio of 5:1 mL/g, stirring speed of 350 r/min, and leaching time of 30 min. Under these conditions, the leaching conversions of rhenium and arsenic reached 96.0% and 93.8%, respectively. Through characterization of precipitate and leaching residue using ICP, SEM-EDS, XRD, and XPS analyses, the process and related reactions were elucidated. Results demonstrated that low-valence rhenium oxides and sulfides serve as the main reactive species during H2O2 leaching, whereas organic sulfur, high-valence oxides, and copper sulfide remained stable and resistant to leaching. Selective precipitation of copper effectively eliminated insoluble metal sulfides from rhenium-containing precipitates, thereby enabling efficient separation of rhenium under mild conditions.
Mao et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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