
This gold-mining method can extract precious metals from discarded central processing units (CPUs) in old mobile phones and computers and printed circuit boards (PCBs) removed from home appliances through chemical washing in less than 20 minutes.
Treating 10kg (22lbs) of PCBs can yield around 1.4g (0.05 ounces) of gold at a total cost of about US$72, or US$1,455 per ounce, according to the researchers. This is the most cost-efficient method reported to date and makes e-waste gold recycling an incredibly lucrative business: in early January, international gold prices exceeded US$4,472 per ounce.
As China produces several million tonnes of e-waste each year, this technological breakthrough offers a potentially game-changing solution to both resource scarcity and environmental harm as Beijing positions urban mining as the future of sustainable precious metal recovery.
Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou Institute of Energy Conversion, potassium chloride, urban mining, South China University of Technology, China Resources Recycling Association, mobile phones and computers, PCBs, potassium peroxymonosulfate, CPUs, Angewandte Chemie International Edition, China, electronic waste, Beijing, Chinese scientists#Chinese #team #unveils #worlds #efficient #ewaste #gold #recovery #tech1767859838












