WVU receives $3 million from DOD to boost rare earth extraction capacity

press release

July 24, 2023

West Virginia University researchers plan to increase the supply of rare earth elements and critical minerals extracted from acid mine drainage across the country, thanks to $3 million in funding from the U.S. Department of Defense (DOD).

A team led by Paul Ziemkiewicz, director of the Water Research Institute at WVU, will establish resource recovery sites in West Virginia and Montana as part of the project. Ziemkiewicz is a member of the Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration.
Beginning in 2016, Ziemkiewicz and his colleagues pioneered a way to extract REE/CM, which power everything from smartphones to the nation’s missile guidance system, from AMD. This latest project expands their demonstration program beyond coal mines and will involve a large copper mine.

Three AMD treatment plants will be operated at coal sites in Bismarck, Grant County, and Fola, Clay County, and at Montana Resources’ copper mine in Butte, Montana.
“This funding allows significant broadening of our feedstock supply to include AMD from Appalachian coal mines as well as hard rock mines in the West,” Ziemkiewicz said. “This project also focuses on feedstock supply to a central REE/CM refinery by including large as well as small AMD sources.

“Hard rock mining sites such as copper mines tend to collect AMD on a much larger scale than coal mines and, often, the REE/CM concentrations are substantially higher. This means that relatively few hard rock AMD sites can generate very significant volumes of high grade preconcentrate.”

The Montana site is operated by Montana Resources LLC and produces about 5,500 gallons of AMD per minute while the Bismarck plant, which is operated by the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection, treats up to 1,000 gallons per minute. At the other end of the scale, the Fola location’s capacity would be about 100 gallons per minute.

The project team will also collaborate with Continental Heritage at Fola. Much of West Virginia’s coal AMD-based REE/CM feedstock is currently produced at small, remote discharges like Fola with flow rates in the range of 10 to 200 gallons per minute.

“Together, they add up to a lot of potential REE/CM,” Ziemkiewicz said. “We need to demonstrate that it can be done at scale while producing clean water and a revenue stream for the operators.”
Ziemkiewicz explained the team is using a patented WVU process that will recover preconcentrate that can be transported to a central refinery for processing to REE/CM products for the domestic market.

China currently dominates the global market, accounting for more than two-thirds in rare earth metal production, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

Based on previous, small-scale tests, Ziemkiewicz expects the three sites to produce a uniform feedstock to which a grade/specification and value can be assigned.
“This means the central refinery can purchase feedstock from suppliers and process it with minimal adjustment related to the source of the concentrate,” he said. “Nearly all of the infrastructure needed to install our technology is in place and operational at each site.”

The sites will be continuously operated, Ziemkiewicz added, and the WVU Rare Earth Extraction Facility will evaluate the preconcentrate.


The WVU research team also earned $8 million in funding from the U.S. Department of Energy in April to undertake a study to design and evaluate the economics of a full-scale central refinery to produce REE/CM products using AMD-based feedstock. Read about that grant here.

“Our team at WVU and Virginia Tech, the West Virginia DEP and our industry partners have worked hard to bring this concept to successful pilot scale testing,” Ziemkiewicz said. “Thanks to the continued support of our congressional delegation through DOE and now, DOD, we will push this novel source of REE/CM out of the lab, toward commercial reality.”

Photo: Acid mine drainage is shown at the Richard Mine site on lower Deckers Creek. A West Virginia University research team, led by Paul Ziemkiewicz, has been awarded $3 million from the U.S. Department of Defense to increase the supply of rare earth elements and critical minerals extracted from acid mine drainage across the country. (WVU Photo/Brian Persinger)

 

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