Structural and Magnetic Characteristics Evaluation of Iron Oxide Extracted from Printer Toner Wastes

The need to recycle and develop valuable materials from waste, and use them in various applications have become increasingly important in recent decades. Printer toner waste is one of the most polluting electronic waste due to the toxic nature of the material content in it. Despite the toxicity of t...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inMaterials science forum Vol. 1056; pp. 99 - 104
Main Authors Nazlan, Rodziah, Ramli, Ros Azlinawati, Ghazali, Nurul Hidayah, Nazri, Nur Asyikin Ahmad, Lian, Yuen Mei, Razali, Azaima
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Trans Tech Publications Ltd 14.03.2022
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Summary:The need to recycle and develop valuable materials from waste, and use them in various applications have become increasingly important in recent decades. Printer toner waste is one of the most polluting electronic waste due to the toxic nature of the material content in it. Despite the toxicity of the material in the toner powder, it contains iron oxide that can be extracted and recycled to make a beneficial material. Therefore, this study aims to investigate a facile and effective method to extract iron oxide from printer toner waste powder. Magnetic separation and oxidation processes were used as a method for extraction and phase conversion. The structural transformation was investigated using X-ray diffraction, microstructural observation using scanning electron microscope whereas static magnetic characteristics were investigates using vibrating sample magnetometer. The results from XRD spectra show that printer toner wastes that have been subjected to magnetic separation process and chemical treatment, even without any heat treatment process, have produced a single phase magnetite. Through the process of heat treatment on the sample, phase transformation from magnetite to hematite occurs, in which a single phase of hematite is obtained at a temperature of 1400 °C. The saturation magnetization of the sample also showed a reduction where the sample before undergoing the heat treatment process had a saturated magnetization value of 18.81 emu/g. Meanwhile, after heat treatment, the saturation magnetization value decreased to 0.42 emu/g. These results are in line with the phase transformation shown where magnetite has high ferrimagnetic characteristics, whereas hematite is basically antiferromagnetic at room temperature. However, the saturation magnetization that has been obtained in hematite shows a little difference to that of commercially sold hematite. This proves that iron oxide extracted from printer toner waste has a high potential as an alternative to existing commercial iron oxide in producing high performance magnetic materials.
Bibliography:Selected peer-reviewed full text papers from the 3rd Symposium on Industrial Science and Technology (SISTEC 2021), August 25-26, online, Malaysia
ISSN:0255-5476
1662-9752
1662-9752
DOI:10.4028/p-i4liyl