Detailed Record



Scalable and Consolidated Microbial Platform for Rare Earth Element Leaching and Recovery from Waste Sources


Abstract Chemical methods for the extraction and refinement of technologically critical rare earth elements (REEs) are energy-intensive, hazardous, and environmentally destructive. Current biobased extraction systems rely on extremophilic organisms and generate many of the same detrimental effects as chemical methodologies. The mesophilic methylotrophic bacterium Methylobacterium extorquens AM1 was previously shown to grow using electronic waste by naturally acquiring REEs to power methanol metabolism. Here we show that growth using electronic waste as a sole REE source is scalable up to 10 L with consistent metal yields without the use of harsh acids or high temperatures. The addition of organic acids increases REE leaching in a nonspecific manner. REE-specific bioleaching can be engineered through the overproduction of REE-binding ligands (called lanthanophores) and pyrroloquinoline quinone. REE bioaccumulation increases with the leachate concentration and is highly specific. REEs are stored intracellularly in polyphosphate granules, and genetic engineering to eliminate exopolyphosphatase activity increases metal accumulation, confirming the link between phosphate metabolism and biological REE use. Finally, we report the innate ability of M. extorquens to grow using other complex REE sources, including pulverized smartphones, demonstrating the flexibility and potential for use as a recovery platform for these critical metals.
Authors Nathan Good ORCID , Christina S. Kang-Yun ORCID , Morgan Z. Su , Alexa M. Zytnick , Colin Barber , Huong N. Vu , Joseph M. Grace , Hoang Hai Nguyen ORCID , Wenjun Zhang ORCID , Elizabeth Skovran ORCID , Maohong Fan University of WyomingORCID , Dan M. Park ORCID , N. Cecilia Martínez-Gómez ORCID
Journal Info American Chemical Society | Environmental Science & Technology
Publication Date 12/27/2023
ISSN 0013-936X
TypeKeyword Image article
Open Access hybrid Hybrid Access
DOI https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.3c06775
KeywordsKeyword Image Rare Earth Elements (Score: 0.563495) , Battery Recycling (Score: 0.543808)