
Cornell researchers are engineering bacteria to solve challenges of extracting rare earth elements from ore; the substances are vital for modern life but refining them after mining is costly, harms the environment and mostly occurs abroad.
The elements – of which there are 15 in the periodic table – are necessary for everything from computers, cell phones, screens, microphones, wind turbines, electric vehicles and conductors to radars, sonars, LED lights and rechargeable batteries.
A new study describes a proof of principle for engineering a bacteria, Gluconobacter oxydans, that takes a big first step towards meeting skyrocketing rare earth element demand in a way that matches the cost and efficiency of traditional thermochemical extraction and refinement methods and is clean enough to meet U.S. environmental standards.
“We’re trying to come up with an environmentally friendly, low-temperature, low-pressure method for getting rare earth elements out of a rock,” said Buz Barstow, the paper’s senior author and an assistant professor of biological and environmental engineering in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences.
Alexa Schmitz, a postdoctoral researcher in Barstow’s lab, is first author of the study, “Generation of a Gluconobacter oxydans knockout collection for improved extraction of rare earth elements,” published Nov. 18 in Nature Communications.
While the U.S. once refined its own rare earth elements, that production stopped more than five decades ago. Now, refinement of these elements takes place almost entirely in other countries, particularly China.
“The majority of rare earth element production and extraction is in the hands of foreign nations,” said co-author Esteban Gazel, associate professor of earth and atmospheric sciences in the College of Engineering. “So for the security of our country and way of life, we need to get back on track to controlling that resource.”
To meet U.S. annual needs for rare earth elements, roughly 71.5 million tonnes (~78.8 million tons) of raw ore would be required to extract 10,000 kilograms (~22,000 pounds) of elements.
Current methods rely on dissolving rock with hot sulphuric acid, followed by using organic solvents to separate very similar individual elements from each other in a solution.
“We want to figure out a way to make a bug that does that job better,” Barstow said.
G. oxydans is known for making an acid called biolixiviant that dissolves rock; the bacteria uses the acid to pull phosphates from rare earth elements. The researchers have begun to manipulate G. oxydans’ genes so it extracts the elements more efficiently.
To do so, the researchers used a technology that Barstow helped develop, called Knockout Sudoku, that allowed them to disable the 2,733 genes in G. oxydans’ genome one by one. The team curated mutants, each with a specific gene knocked out, so they could identify which genes play roles in getting elements out of rock.
Schmitz identified genes involved in two systems in G. oxydans; one that puts the brakes on acidification and another that accelerates it. “We believe that this mutant can’t tell when it’s had enough phosphate, so it keeps producing acidic biolixiviant to dissolve more,” Schmitz said. The team is also working to find ways to regulate the gene that accelerates acid production. They hope to create a system where bacteria run on cheap cellulose-derived sugars for energy.
In the study, Gazel’s lab helped develop mass spectrometry techniques with the support of co-author Matt Reid, assistant professor of civil and environmental engineering, which Schmitz used to measure concentrations of rare earth elements from solutions where mutants were exposed to ore. “For some of the mutants, they were able to get very high concentrations [of rare earth elements from ore],” Gazel said.
“I am incredibly optimistic,” Gazel said. “We have a process here that is going to be more efficient than anything that was done before.”
Original Article: Bacteria could extract elements for modern tech sustainably
More from: Cornell University
The Latest on: Rare earth elements
- Perak Opposition leader questions MB over need for highway and rare earth projectson May 26, 2022 at 11:39 pm
Perak Opposition leader Abdul Aziz Bari today questioned Perak Mentri Besar Datuk Seri Saarani Mohamad on the proposed highway project from Gopeng to Kuala Kangsar — which bypasses the Menora Tunnel ...
- Perak JMG director says lanthanide found in Hulu Perak is a non-radioactive rare earth elementon May 25, 2022 at 3:23 am
Perak Department of Mineral and Geoscience (JMG) director Datuk Ahmad Zukni Ahmad Khalil said the rare earth project identified as lanthanide in Hulu Perak is ...
- Global Rare Earth Magnet Market Growth, Statistics, Trends, Revenue Analysis of Top Companies by 2025on May 24, 2022 at 3:31 am
As per experts, the industry is expected to record a boom post the COVID-19 outbreak, owing to increasing demand for rare earth elements as numerous top producers are amplifying the production volume ...
- NioCorp's New Rare Earth Plans Are Really, Terribly Unexcitingon May 24, 2022 at 2:36 am
NioCorp's share price has jumped 50% in the last few days. Check out what I think about NioCorp and the reality of its announcement.
- Worldwide Rare Earth Elements Industry to 2026 - Asia Pacific Gains Regional Dominanceon May 20, 2022 at 3:06 am
The "Rare Earth Elements Market - Global Industry Analysis (2018 - 2021) - Growth Trends and Market Forecast (2022-2026)" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering. According to the ...
- Rare Earth Metals Market Exceeding the Valuation of US$ 3,818.8 Mn between the Forecast Period 2021 and 2031on May 19, 2022 at 10:34 pm
As per ESOMAR-certified consulting firm Future Market Insights (FMI), the global rare earth metals market is poised to witness steady growth at around 6% ...
- Proposed Nebraska mine has sizeable deposit of rare elementson May 19, 2022 at 4:33 pm
The mining company that wants to extract a rare heat-resistant element from the ground under southeast Nebraska says a new report shows the deposit it plans to mine holds a significant amount of other ...
- Global Rare Earth Elements Market Report to 2026 - Growth Trends and Market Forecast - ResearchAndMarkets.comon May 18, 2022 at 3:07 am
The "Rare Earth Elements Market - Global Industry Analysis (2018 - 2021) - Growth Trends and Market Forecast (2022-2026)" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering. According to the ...
- Rare Earth Metals Caught In Trade Waron May 12, 2022 at 5:00 pm
The trade war has escalated to include rare earth metals, and if the threats and rumors currently circulating come to fruition, the technologies and industries that make up the very core of modern ...
- China Plays Hard Ball With Rare Earth Elementson May 9, 2022 at 6:56 am
They have recently lashed out at the United States, Japan and especially Australia, threatening to cut off their supplies of rare earth elements. China might have reason to feel aggrieved because ...
via Bing News
The Latest on: Rare earth elements
via Google News
Add Comment