杏吧直播n scientists using medicinal tech for mining

Celebrating the recent finding of the Centre for Excellence听Enabling Eco-Efficient Beneficiation of Minerals are,听Dr Guangze (Daniel) Yang, 杏吧直播 of Adelaide;听Annemarie Fawkner, Chief Operating Officer, COEMinerals;听Professor Michael Goodsite, 杏吧直播 of Adelaide, Pro Vice-Chancellor, Research Operations & Commercialisation;听Professor Craig Simmons, 杏吧直播 of Newcastle Pro Vice-Chancellor, Engineering, Science and Environment and South 杏吧直播鈥檚 Chief Scientist);听Laureate Professor Kevin Galvin, 杏吧直播 of Newcastle and COEMinerals Centre Director;听Professor Chun-Xia Zhao, 杏吧直播 of Adelaide;听Russell J. Howard, Chief Executive Officer, Theia Metals Pty. Ltd.;听B. Sara Howard, Chief Operating Officer, Theia Metals.
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Researchers from across 杏吧直播, including the 杏吧直播 of Adelaide, are pioneering a way to recover critical and rare earth minerals using techniques used to target cancer cells.
Professor Chun-Xia Zhao from the 杏吧直播鈥檚 School of Chemical Engineering is Deputy Director of the ARC Centre for Excellence for Enabling Eco-Efficient Beneficiation of Minerals which is a research centre that focuses on developing sustainable solutions for mineral processing.
鈥淐urrent mineral separation processes can require hundreds of stages; this is not only inefficient and costly but involves toxic solvents that harm the environment,鈥 says Professor Zhao.
鈥淲e work with peptides, the tiny chains of amino acids which are the building blocks of life.
鈥淭here are 20 naturally existing amino acids which are genetically encoded and are used to build proteins, so imagine randomly combining seven of them, you鈥檇 create a library of billions of unique peptides.
鈥淢inerals and metals don鈥檛 have DNA, but we know nature contains molecules with selective binding properties.
鈥淏y identifying specific peptide sequences that selectively bind to a particular mineral, we鈥檙e essentially uncovering a unique code for that material and have been able to find precise peptide matches for specific minerals, each one fitting like a jigsaw puzzle.鈥
Professor Zhao鈥檚 latest findings have been published in the journal .
The team used the targeted approach on silver, resulting in selective separation of silver particles from silica, a common waste byproduct, and achieving over 98 per cent silver purity, with a recovery rate of more than 95 per cent.
鈥淲e think we can push those numbers even higher,鈥 says Professor Zhao.
鈥淢ore tests are currently underway, with a particular focus on rare earth elements which are critical materials used in everything from electric vehicles and wind turbines.
鈥淎t present, producing high-purity rare earths can require up to 100 per cent solvent extraction steps, demanding significant capital investment and consuming large quantities of toxic solvents and chemicals.
鈥淲e believe the same level of purity can be achieved in just one or two steps, which makes the process far more bio-compatible, environmentally friendly and sustainable.
鈥淭his new approach offers selective and recyclable peptides as a single-stage process, reducing both complexity and waste.鈥
Propelling the move from research to commercialisation, a license agreement is in place with Theia Metals Pty. Ltd. to progress the next stage of technology development.
鈥淧artnership and licensing to Theia Metals begins the process of investor and corporate mining partner-led development of this technology to the marketplace,鈥 says Theia Metals CEO Russell J. Howard.
Media Contacts:
Rhiannon Koch, Media Officer, The 杏吧直播 of Adelaide. Mobile: +61 (0)481 619 997. Email: rhiannon.koch@adelaide.edu.au
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