Extracting Minerals from Seawater: An Energy Analysis

The concept of recovering minerals from seawater has been proposed as a way of counteracting the gradual depletion of conventional mineral ores. Seawater contains large amounts of dissolved ions and the four most concentrated metal ones (Na, Mg, Ca, K) are being commercially extracted today. However...

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Main Author: Ugo Bardi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2010-04-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/2/4/980/
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spelling doaj-0757e89b05774852b246e96b567e334c2020-11-24T20:56:12ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502010-04-012498099210.3390/su2040980Extracting Minerals from Seawater: An Energy AnalysisUgo BardiThe concept of recovering minerals from seawater has been proposed as a way of counteracting the gradual depletion of conventional mineral ores. Seawater contains large amounts of dissolved ions and the four most concentrated metal ones (Na, Mg, Ca, K) are being commercially extracted today. However, all the other metal ions exist at much lower concentrations. This paper reports an estimate of the feasibility of the extraction of these metal ions on the basis of the energy needed. In most cases, the result is that extraction in amounts comparable to the present production from land mines would be impossible because of the very large amount of energy needed. This conclusion holds also for uranium as fuel for the present generation of nuclear fission plants. Nevertheless, in a few cases, mainly lithium, extraction from seawater could provide amounts of metals sufficient for closing the cycle of metal use in the economy, provided that an increased level of recycling can be attained. http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/2/4/980/mineral extractionuranium supplylithium supplycopper supplynuclear fissionnuclear fusion
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ugo Bardi
spellingShingle Ugo Bardi
Extracting Minerals from Seawater: An Energy Analysis
Sustainability
mineral extraction
uranium supply
lithium supply
copper supply
nuclear fission
nuclear fusion
author_facet Ugo Bardi
author_sort Ugo Bardi
title Extracting Minerals from Seawater: An Energy Analysis
title_short Extracting Minerals from Seawater: An Energy Analysis
title_full Extracting Minerals from Seawater: An Energy Analysis
title_fullStr Extracting Minerals from Seawater: An Energy Analysis
title_full_unstemmed Extracting Minerals from Seawater: An Energy Analysis
title_sort extracting minerals from seawater: an energy analysis
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2010-04-01
description The concept of recovering minerals from seawater has been proposed as a way of counteracting the gradual depletion of conventional mineral ores. Seawater contains large amounts of dissolved ions and the four most concentrated metal ones (Na, Mg, Ca, K) are being commercially extracted today. However, all the other metal ions exist at much lower concentrations. This paper reports an estimate of the feasibility of the extraction of these metal ions on the basis of the energy needed. In most cases, the result is that extraction in amounts comparable to the present production from land mines would be impossible because of the very large amount of energy needed. This conclusion holds also for uranium as fuel for the present generation of nuclear fission plants. Nevertheless, in a few cases, mainly lithium, extraction from seawater could provide amounts of metals sufficient for closing the cycle of metal use in the economy, provided that an increased level of recycling can be attained.
topic mineral extraction
uranium supply
lithium supply
copper supply
nuclear fission
nuclear fusion
url http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/2/4/980/
work_keys_str_mv AT ugobardi extractingmineralsfromseawateranenergyanalysis
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