Life Cycle Assessment of Separation Methods of Cerium Oxide from Monazite Ore

Life cycle assessment was applied to evaluate the environmental impact of cerium oxide (CeO2) production systems from monazite ore using integrating and excluding liquid-liquid extraction methods. It is a heterogeneous rare earths oxides catalyst which can be utilized for catalysed transesterificati...

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Main Authors: Dussadee Ratthanapra, Unchalee Suwanmanee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AIDIC Servizi S.r.l. 2019-05-01
Series:Chemical Engineering Transactions
Online Access:https://www.cetjournal.it/index.php/cet/article/view/9917
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spelling doaj-8288eee9e4db4124a3e0d13cde4038de2021-02-16T21:05:06ZengAIDIC Servizi S.r.l.Chemical Engineering Transactions2283-92162019-05-017410.3303/CET1974152Life Cycle Assessment of Separation Methods of Cerium Oxide from Monazite OreDussadee RatthanapraUnchalee SuwanmaneeLife cycle assessment was applied to evaluate the environmental impact of cerium oxide (CeO2) production systems from monazite ore using integrating and excluding liquid-liquid extraction methods. It is a heterogeneous rare earths oxides catalyst which can be utilized for catalysed transesterification to produce biodiesel. The impact assessment methodology used for characterization was the midpoint CML baseline method in terms the potentials of abiotic depletion, global warming, ozone layer depletion, human toxicity, freshwater aquatic ecotoxicity, marine aquatic ecotoxicity, terrestrial ecotoxicity, photochemical oxidation, acidification, and eutrophication. The Eco-indicator 99 method was performed an endpoint approach: human health, ecosystem quality, and resources. The data on process was available from a field study conducted in Thailand Institute of Nuclear Technology and applied into SimaPro 8.2.5. The LCA results showed that the removal of solvent extraction process can achievable the higher purity of CeO2 concentration and presented the most attractive process for cerium oxide from monazite ore in term of environmental impact assessment. Approximately 35-85% of the total environmental values and 79% of the total damage scores to human health and resources occurred during the separation step with integrating liquid-liquid extraction. The digestion step is the primary cause of the characterization impacts (30-56% of the total impacts) and damage to human health, ecosystem quality, and resources (37% of the total scores).https://www.cetjournal.it/index.php/cet/article/view/9917
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dussadee Ratthanapra
Unchalee Suwanmanee
spellingShingle Dussadee Ratthanapra
Unchalee Suwanmanee
Life Cycle Assessment of Separation Methods of Cerium Oxide from Monazite Ore
Chemical Engineering Transactions
author_facet Dussadee Ratthanapra
Unchalee Suwanmanee
author_sort Dussadee Ratthanapra
title Life Cycle Assessment of Separation Methods of Cerium Oxide from Monazite Ore
title_short Life Cycle Assessment of Separation Methods of Cerium Oxide from Monazite Ore
title_full Life Cycle Assessment of Separation Methods of Cerium Oxide from Monazite Ore
title_fullStr Life Cycle Assessment of Separation Methods of Cerium Oxide from Monazite Ore
title_full_unstemmed Life Cycle Assessment of Separation Methods of Cerium Oxide from Monazite Ore
title_sort life cycle assessment of separation methods of cerium oxide from monazite ore
publisher AIDIC Servizi S.r.l.
series Chemical Engineering Transactions
issn 2283-9216
publishDate 2019-05-01
description Life cycle assessment was applied to evaluate the environmental impact of cerium oxide (CeO2) production systems from monazite ore using integrating and excluding liquid-liquid extraction methods. It is a heterogeneous rare earths oxides catalyst which can be utilized for catalysed transesterification to produce biodiesel. The impact assessment methodology used for characterization was the midpoint CML baseline method in terms the potentials of abiotic depletion, global warming, ozone layer depletion, human toxicity, freshwater aquatic ecotoxicity, marine aquatic ecotoxicity, terrestrial ecotoxicity, photochemical oxidation, acidification, and eutrophication. The Eco-indicator 99 method was performed an endpoint approach: human health, ecosystem quality, and resources. The data on process was available from a field study conducted in Thailand Institute of Nuclear Technology and applied into SimaPro 8.2.5. The LCA results showed that the removal of solvent extraction process can achievable the higher purity of CeO2 concentration and presented the most attractive process for cerium oxide from monazite ore in term of environmental impact assessment. Approximately 35-85% of the total environmental values and 79% of the total damage scores to human health and resources occurred during the separation step with integrating liquid-liquid extraction. The digestion step is the primary cause of the characterization impacts (30-56% of the total impacts) and damage to human health, ecosystem quality, and resources (37% of the total scores).
url https://www.cetjournal.it/index.php/cet/article/view/9917
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