Can coal mines be tapped for rare earth elements?

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Energy And Resources News

Petroleum,Fossil Fuels,Energy Policy

A team of geologists analyzed 3,500 samples taken in and around coal mines in Utah and Colorado. Their findings open the possibility that these mines could see a secondary resource stream in the form of rare earth metals used in renewable energy and numerous other high-tech applications.

New research documents elevated levels of the critical minerals, needed for energy transition, above and below coal seams in Utah and Colorado

"The model is if you're already moving rock, could you move a little more rock for resources towards energy transition?" Birgenheier said."In those areas, we're finding that the rare earth elements are concentrated in fine-grain shale units, the muddy shales that are above and below the coal seams." The association between coal and REE deposits has been well documented elsewhere, but little data had been previously gathered or analyzed in Utah and Colorado's coal fields.

The team deployed two different methods to record levels of rare earths, expressed in parts per million, or ppm, in the samples. One was a hand-held device for quick readings in the field, the other used Inductively Coupled Plasma-Mass Spectrometry, or ICP-MS, in an on-campus lab.

 

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