The tremendous potential of deep-sea mud as a source of rare-earth elements

被引:0
|
作者
Yutaro Takaya
Kazutaka Yasukawa
Takehiro Kawasaki
Koichiro Fujinaga
Junichiro Ohta
Yoichi Usui
Kentaro Nakamura
Jun-Ichi Kimura
Qing Chang
Morihisa Hamada
Gjergj Dodbiba
Tatsuo Nozaki
Koichi Iijima
Tomohiro Morisawa
Takuma Kuwahara
Yasuyuki Ishida
Takao Ichimura
Masaki Kitazume
Toyohisa Fujita
Yasuhiro Kato
机构
[1] Waseda University,Department of Resources and Environmental Engineering School of Creative Science and Engineering
[2] Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC),Research and Development Center for Submarine Resources
[3] The University of Tokyo,Frontier Research Center for Energy and Resources, School of Engineering
[4] Chiba Institute of Technology,Ocean Resources Research Center for Next Generation
[5] The University of Tokyo,Department of Systems Innovation, School of Engineering
[6] Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC),Department of Solid Earth Geochemistry
[7] Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC),Department of Deep Earth Structure and Dynamics Research
[8] Kobe University,Department of Planetology, Graduate School of Science
[9] Toa Corporation,Engineering Project Department
[10] Toa Corporation,Research and Development Center
[11] Taiheiyo Cement Corporation,Central Research Laboratory
[12] Tokyo Institute of Technology,Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Potential risks of supply shortages for critical metals including rare-earth elements and yttrium (REY) have spurred great interest in commercial mining of deep-sea mineral resources. Deep-sea mud containing over 5,000 ppm total REY content was discovered in the western North Pacific Ocean near Minamitorishima Island, Japan, in 2013. This REY-rich mud has great potential as a rare-earth metal resource because of the enormous amount available and its advantageous mineralogical features. Here, we estimated the resource amount in REY-rich mud with Geographical Information System software and established a mineral processing procedure to greatly enhance its economic value. The resource amount was estimated to be 1.2 Mt of rare-earth oxide for the most promising area (105 km2 × 0–10 mbsf), which accounts for 62, 47, 32, and 56 years of annual global demand for Y, Eu, Tb, and Dy, respectively. Moreover, using a hydrocyclone separator enabled us to recover selectively biogenic calcium phosphate grains, which have high REY content (up to 22,000 ppm) and constitute the coarser domain in the grain-size distribution. The enormous resource amount and the effectiveness of the mineral processing are strong indicators that this new REY resource could be exploited in the near future.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] The tremendous potential of deep-sea mud as a source of rare-earth elements
    Takaya, Yutaro
    Yasukawa, Kazutaka
    Kawasaki, Takehiro
    Fujinaga, Koichiro
    Ohta, Junichiro
    Usui, Yoichi
    Nakamura, Kentaro
    Kimura, Jun-Ichi
    Chang, Qing
    Hamada, Morihisa
    Dodbiba, Gjergj
    Nozaki, Tatsuo
    Iijima, Koichi
    Morisawa, Tomohiro
    Kuwahara, Takuma
    Ishida, Yasuyuki
    Ichimura, Takao
    Kitazume, Masaki
    Fujita, Toyohisa
    Kato, Yasuhiro
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2018, 8
  • [2] Deep-sea mud in the Pacific Ocean as a potential resource for rare-earth elements
    Kato Y.
    Fujinaga K.
    Nakamura K.
    Takaya Y.
    Kitamura K.
    Ohta J.
    Toda R.
    Nakashima T.
    Iwamori H.
    Nature Geoscience, 2011, 4 (8) : 535 - 539
  • [3] Deep-sea mud in the Pacific Ocean as a potential resource for rare-earth elements
    Kato, Yasuhiro
    Fujinaga, Koichiro
    Nakamura, Kentaro
    Takaya, Yutaro
    Kitamura, Kenichi
    Ohta, Junichiro
    Toda, Ryuichi
    Nakashima, Takuya
    Iwamori, Hikaru
    NATURE GEOSCIENCE, 2011, 4 (08) : 535 - 539
  • [4] Geological features and resource potential of deep-sea mud highly enriched in rare-earth elements in the Central Pacific Basin and the Penrhyn Basin
    Ohta, Junichiro
    Yasukawa, Kazutaka
    Nakamura, Kentaro
    Fujinaga, Koichiro
    Iijima, Koichi
    Kato, Yasuhiro
    ORE GEOLOGY REVIEWS, 2021, 139
  • [5] Rare-Earth Elements in Deep-Sea Sediments in the South Pacific Gyre: Source Materials and Resource Potentials
    Tanaka, Erika
    Mimura, Kazuhide
    Nakamura, Kentaro
    Ohta, Junichiro
    Yasukawa, Kazutaka
    Kato, Yasuhiro
    GEOCHEMISTRY GEOPHYSICS GEOSYSTEMS, 2023, 24 (03)
  • [6] DIFFUSION OF RARE-EARTH ELEMENTS IN FISH TEETH FROM DEEP-SEA SEDIMENTS
    TOYODA, K
    TOKONAMI, M
    NATURE, 1990, 345 (6276) : 607 - 609
  • [7] Quantifying the controlling mineral phases of rare-earth elements in deep-sea pelagic sediments
    Liao, Jianlin
    Chen, Jieyun
    Sun, Xiaoming
    Wu, Zhongwei
    Deng, Yinan
    Shi, Xuefa
    Wang, Yanjingyu
    Chen, Yuxi
    Koschinsky, Andrea
    CHEMICAL GEOLOGY, 2022, 595
  • [8] Chemostratigraphy of deep-sea sediments in the western North Pacific Ocean: Implications for genesis of mud highly enriched in rare-earth elements and yttrium
    Tanaka, Erika
    Nakamura, Kentaro
    Yasukawa, Kazutaka
    Mimura, Kazuhide
    Fujinaga, Koichiro
    Iijima, Koichi
    Nozaki, Tatsuo
    Kato, Yasuhiro
    ORE GEOLOGY REVIEWS, 2020, 119
  • [9] Carriers of rare earth elements in Pacific deep-sea sediments
    Takebe, M
    JOURNAL OF GEOLOGY, 2005, 113 (02): : 201 - 215
  • [10] Chemostratigraphic Correlations of Deep-Sea Sediments in the Western North Pacific Ocean: A New Constraint on the Distribution of Mud Highly Enriched in Rare-Earth Elements
    Tanaka, Erika
    Nakamura, Kentaro
    Yasukawa, Kazutaka
    Mimura, Kazuhide
    Fujinaga, Koichiro
    Ohta, Junichiro
    Iijima, Koichi
    Nozaki, Tatsuo
    Machida, Shiki
    Kato, Yasuhiro
    MINERALS, 2020, 10 (06) : 1 - 19