Bioleaching of lithium from jadarite, spodumene, and lepidolite using Acidiothiobacillus ferrooxidans

Front Microbiol. 2024 Nov 13:15:1467408. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2024.1467408. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Lithium (Li) is becoming increasingly important due to its use in clean technologies that are required for the transition to net zero. Although acidophilic bioleaching has been used to recover metals from a wide range of deposits, its potential to recover Li has not yet been fully explored. In this study, we used a model Fe(II)- and S-oxidising bacterium, Acidiothiobacillus ferrooxidans (At. Ferrooxidans), to extract Li from three different minerals and kinetic modelling to predict the dominant reaction pathways for Li release. Bioleaching of Li from the aluminosilicate minerals lepidolite (K(Li,Al)3(Al,Si,Rb)4O10(F,OH)2) and spodumene (LiAl(Si2O6)) was slow, with only up to 14% (approximately 12 mg/L) of Li released over 30 days. By contrast, At. ferrooxidans accelerated Li leaching from a Li-bearing borosilicate clay (jadarite, LiNaB3SiO7OH) by over 50% (over 120 mg/L) in 21 days of leaching, and consistently enhanced Li release throughout the experiment compared to the uninoculated control. Biofilm formation and flocculation of sediment occurred exclusively in the experiments with At. ferrooxidans and jadarite. Fe(II) present in the jadarite-bearing clay acted as an electron donor. Chemical leaching of Li from jadarite using H2SO4 was most effective, releasing approximately 75% (180 mg/L) of Li, but required more acid than bioleaching for pH control. Kinetic modelling was unable to replicate the data for jadarite bioleaching after primary abiotic leaching stages, suggesting additional processes beyond chemical leaching were responsible for the release of Li. A new crystalline phase, tentatively identified as boric acid, was observed to form after acid leaching of jadarite. Overall, the results demonstrate the potential for acidophilic bioleaching to recover Li from jadarite, with relevance for other Li-bearing deposits.

Keywords: bioleaching; critical minerals; iron bio-oxidation; lithium; metal recovery.

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare that financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. This research was funded via the GeoNetZero Centre for doctoral training funding grant. LN and KHE acknowledge funding from NERC via the LiFT (Lithium for Future Technologies) project (NE/V007009/1) and KH-E and CF acknowledge funding from the NEMO project, which was funded by the EU Framework Programme for Research and Innovation Horizon 2020 under Grant Agreement No. 776846.