-->
American Resources Policy Network
Promoting the development of American mineral resources.
  • Through the Gateway: Vanadium – Next-Gen Uses Drive Co-Product Challenge

    As we continue our look “Through the Gateway,” one thing has become abundantly clear already:  Beyond their traditional uses, both Gateway Metals and their Co-Products have become building blocks of our renewable energy future.  This held true for Copper and its Co-Products, but it is also equally true for Aluminum and its Co-Products. While Gallium’s ability to form compounds with various elements lends itself to its application in smartphones and other wireless devices, as well as solar technology, Vanadium – another material “unlocked” by Aluminum – is making an entry.

    Traditionally known as an alloying component in various steels, where its strengthening properties come to bear, it has been used in the building and construction industry for a long time.  Ferrovanadium alloys have also been used in protective military vehicles while a Titanium-Aluminum-Vanadium alloy is used in jet engines and high-speed aircraft.

    More recently, however, the material’s use in energy storage technology has been making headlines.  With the demand for renewable energy continuing to soar, the energy storage market itself is booming.  As Cleantechnica.com explains:

    “Since wind and solar energy come and go, energy storage fills a critical gap in terms of availability and reliability. (…) So far, lithium-ion (Li-ion) technology has staked a claim to the gold standard for energy storage in terms of performance relative to cost. (… ) However, other energy storage technologies have an eye on the prize as well.”

    First generation flow battery technology using Vanadium was initially mired by inefficiencies and costliness, but research efforts, in particular by the Department of Energy’s Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL), have since resulted in significant improvements of the technology.  A breakthrough came with PNNL’s 2011 development of a flow battery design, which added a new electrolyte mix to traditional Vanadium batteries.  This led to a 70 percent increase in storage capacity.

    The vastly improved third generation technology is now being applied in national grid modernization efforts: Earlier last month, a new collaboration between industry, the utility EPB of Chattanooga and three U.S. national laboratories using Vanadium flow battery technology was launched in an effort to “develop metrics for evaluating renewable energy and storage integration and demonstrate the benefits of leading energy storage technology to our nation’s grid modernization efforts.”

    The bottom line:  demand for Vanadium may well increase as technology advances, with new challenges looming large.  It’s a story with a familiar theme for ARPN followers — the co-product challenge:

    According to USGS, Vanadium is at least as plentiful as Nickel and Zinc – at least in terms of its availability in the earth’s crust. However, it rarely occurs in deposits that can be economically mined for the element alone. Between 2009 and 2013, some co-product vanadium production occurred domestically (though not from Bauxite mining for Aluminum), but it has since been suspended. As a result, the United States is currently 100% import dependent for its domestic Vanadium needs – in spite of the fact that “domestic resources and secondary recovery are adequate to supply a large portion of domestic needs.”

    This once more begs the question – isn’t it time for a more comprehensive approach to mineral resource policy?

     

    Share
  • Through the Gateway: Of Pokémon and Co-Products – A Look at Gallium

    All over the world, people are wandering through the streets staring at their smartphones. Whether you’re part of the PokémonGo phenomenon that has taken the world by storm, or whether you can only shake your head, you don’t only have Nintendo to thank for.    One of the Co-Product Metals we’re focusing on this week as part of our “Through the Gateway” campaign plays an important role in allowing you to track down your favorite Pokémon in your neighborhood for hours on end: Gallium.

    The “smart metal”, as USGS has dubbed Gallium, is one of the Periodic Table’s premier social networkers:  it forms compounds with various elements. Among those are Gallium Arsenide (GaAs) and Gallium Nitride (GaN), the strong semiconducting properties of which make them key components of the integrated circuits of smartphones and other wireless communication devices.

    Today, its use as semiconductor compound is Gallium’s major application. CIGS compounds (with CIGS standing for Copper-Indium-Gallium-Selenide) are also used in solar technology with CIGS photovoltaic panels promising to efficiently capturing sun rays. Gallium is also a component in other optoelectronic devices (LEDs, photodectors) in aerospace applications, consumer goods, industrial equipment and medical equipment.

    While it is an Aluminum co-product, Gallium is significantly less abundant in the earth’s crust than its main Gateway Metal. Many Bauxite deposits which are mined and processed for Aluminum contain small amounts of Gallium, as do Zinc deposits. However, most of the Gallium we use today is derived from the processing of Bauxite Ore.

    In spite of the fact that we are home to significant Aluminum deposits, the United States is 100% reliant on foreign imports to sufficiently supply our domestic manufacturers with the primary Gallium they need.  Meanwhile, researchers from Yale University sounded the alarm last year on several metals used in our favorite gadgets – including Gallium – being at risk of running out globally. One of the researchers’ comments aptly underscores the broader challenge associated with Co-Product metals:

    The metals we’ve been using for a long time probably won’t present much of a challenge, (…) But some metals that have become deployed for technology only in the last 10 or 20 years are available almost entirely as byproducts. (…) You can’t mine specifically for them; they often exist in small quantities and are used for specialty purposes. And they don’t have any decent substitutes.”

    Even though Gallium is generally considered a scarce resource, it is not so much its overall abundance (or lack thereof) that is problematic here.  According to USGS estimates“world resources of gallium in bauxite exceed 1 billion kilograms and that a considerable quantity of gallium could also be present in world zinc resources.” However, – and that is probably the bigger issue  - “[m]ost of the gallium in bauxite resources cannot be considered to be available in the short term, however, because much of the bauxite will not be mined for many decades. Also, only a small percentage of the gallium metal contained in bauxite and zinc ores is economically recoverable using current separation methods. Larger amounts of gallium could be recovered from these ores if more efficient and improved extraction and separation methods are developed in the future.”

    As the Pokémon craze continues, and with demand for electronic gadgetry and advanced technology on the rise, Gallium is definitely a material to watch in its own right.  But the case of Gallium also underscores why we should care about the relationship between Gateway Metals and their Co-Products in the grand scheme of things, as changing supply and demand scenarios or even mining and refining processes for one can affect the other.

     

    Share
  • Through the Gateway: Aluminum Alloys – Versatility On Steroids

    Last year, researchers developed a material “that’s as strong and light as titanium, another expensive material, but at just a tenth of the cost.” They were able to achieve this feat by tweaking Aluminum’s alloying properties at the nano level. Aluminum’s properties as a stand-alone metal already make it one of the most versatile materials in engineering and [...]
  • Through the Gateway: Aluminum – Building Block of our Sustainable Future

    Probably one of the most important buzzwords of our time is “Sustainability.”  When thinking of the term, mining and industrial metals are probably not the first things that come to mind, but they are in fact integral components of our society’s move towards a greener, more sustainable energy future.  We have already outlined how Copper serves [...]
  • Through the Gateway: Aluminum – Versatile and Timely

    After showcasing our first Gateway Metal, Copper, and its co-products, it’s time to move on to our next Gateway Metal as part of our “Through the Gateway” informational campaign. Chances are, you used it this past weekend, during and/or after your 4th of July barbecue.  It is being featured as a part of a massive art installation currently hosted by [...]
  • Independence Day – A Time To Celebrate Our Freedom, Yet Be Mindful of Growing Dependencies

    It’s that time of the year again. We’re filling our shopping carts with food and drinks, making sure we have enough gas for the grill, and buying some fireworks. The 4th of July, and with that, Independence Day, has arrived. But our country’s 240th birthday is more than a good reason to throw a barbecue in honor [...]
  • Through The Gateway – We Have the Reserves, So Why Aren’t We A Copper Net Exporter?

    Over the past few weeks, we’ve taken you on a journey “Through the Gateway.” We have looked at some of the key properties and supply and demand picture for Copper, as well as Copper’s co-products Tellurium, Selenium, Rhenium and Molybdenum.* It has become abundantly clear that Copper is a critical mineral, not just as a stand-alone traditional mainstay metal, but also as a gateway to the (mostly) rare tech metals it [...]
  • Through the Gateway: Molybdenum – “The Most Important Element You Have Never Heard Of?”

    A writer for Gizmodo has dubbed it the “most important element you have never heard of.”  Writes Esther Inglis-Arkell: “Molybdenum, with its 42 protons and 54 neutrons, sits right in the middle of the periodic table being completely ignored. It’s not useless. (…) It just doesn’t have that indefinable sexiness about it.” Inglis-Arkell explains Molybdenum’s biochemical relevance: Taken [...]
  • Through the Gateway: Rhenium – Rare and Sexy?

    It has helped make airline travel affordable. It helps keep us safe. And it may just be sexier than Salma Hayek – at least in the eyes of one observer.  We’re talking about Rhenium, yet another metal brought to us largely courtesy of Copper refinement.  A silvery white, metallic element, Rhenium, according to USGS, has “an extremely high [...]
  • Through the Gateway: Selenium – More Than Just a Dietary Supplement

    Chances are, you’ve heard of Selenium.  As a trace element, it is an essential mineral found in small amounts in the body, with antioxidant properties. It is also a much-used suite of tools to automate web browsers across many platforms — which is why weeding out our news alerts for stories relevant to ARPN followers can be time-consuming. [...]

Archives