Agile synthesis and automated, high-throughput evaluation of diglycolamides for liquid-liquid extraction of rare-earth elements

Liquid-liquid extraction is one of the most scalable processes to produce rare-earth elements (REEs) from natural and recycled resources. Accelerating the research, development, and deployment (RD&D) of sustainable processes to manufacture REEs requires both facile synthesis of extractive ligand...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inGreen chemistry : an international journal and green chemistry resource : GC Vol. 26; no. 12; pp. 7188 - 7197
Main Authors An, Lun, Yao, Yue, Hall, Tyler B, Zhao, Fu, Qi, Long
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Cambridge Royal Society of Chemistry 17.06.2024
Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Liquid-liquid extraction is one of the most scalable processes to produce rare-earth elements (REEs) from natural and recycled resources. Accelerating the research, development, and deployment (RD&D) of sustainable processes to manufacture REEs requires both facile synthesis of extractive ligands at scale and fast evaluation of process conditions. Here, we establish an integrated RD&D methodology comprised of agile ligand synthesis and automated high-throughput extraction studies. Using diglycolamides (DGAs) as an example, we first developed a method for DGA synthesis (scalable to 200 g) by directly coupling diglycolic acid and secondary amines via the solvent-free melt-amidation reaction. A substrate scope of the melt-amidation synthesis was demonstrated for 9 different DGAs with good yields (85-96%) and purities (88-96%) without any post-reaction workup or purification process. Life cycle assessment shows that our synthesis method outperforms the prior-art pathway in each environmental impact category, especially showing a 67% reduction in global warming potential. Furthermore, we investigate the structure-activity relationship of various alkyl-substituted DGAs using an automated, high-throughput workflow for liquid-liquid extraction, achieving over 180 runs in 48 hours. The acquired data enables the development of a promising flowsheet for separating light and heavy REEs. The integrated RD&D method of agile synthesis and automated, high-throughput extraction studies paves the way for future iterative development of sustainable production of REEs and other critical materials to meet the needs for clean energy transformation. The study presents a scalable and sustainable extraction method for rare earth, featuring a green, scalable synthesis of diglycolamides that reduces greenhouse gas emissions by 67% and a liquid-liquid extraction workflow.
Bibliography:https://doi.org/10.1039/d4gc01146e
Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI
USDOE
ISSN:1463-9262
1463-9270
DOI:10.1039/d4gc01146e