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Thesis
Home   /   Thesis   /   Measurement and modelling of the chemical activity of complex fluid components in hydrometallurgy

Measurement and modelling of the chemical activity of complex fluid components in hydrometallurgy

Chemistry Condensed matter physics, chemistry & nanosciences Soft matter and complex fluids

Abstract

Modern extraction processes rely on the optimal use of complex fluids, the detailed understanding of which remains too empirical. To overcome this, new multi-scale simulation software packages are being developed, with one of the unknowns at the mesoscopic scale, where the aggregation of molecules, interface structures, etc. are not well understood. Chemical activity is key here, as it controls exchange and transfer processes. Understanding it allows these software packages to be validated. It must therefore be possible to measure and analyse it reliably for each component, particularly volatile ones. We proposed to do this by measuring their partial pressures. An initial version of a microfluidic device was developed and patented, which allows the partial pressures of volatile components to be measured simultaneously by infrared spectroscopy in a hollow waveguide. This experimental prototype device has been validated on simple systems. The aim of this thesis is to demonstrate the application potential of this unique tool for the simulation and rapid development of processes, focusing on important concrete cases, both from an experimental and modelling point of view. This type of study would be completely new and would make it possible to experimentally verify the stability predictions of complex fluids for the first time.
The PhD student will first need to update the microfluidic brick. He/she will then use it to measure the chemical activities of the aforementioned complex fluids and will work with Jean-François Dufrèche to test/validate/further develop the software packages. Secondly, at NTU in Singapore and under the co-supervision of Professor Alex Yan Qingyu (https://personal.ntu.edu.sg/alexyan/ ), he/she will use the duplicate microfluidic platform currently being assembled to apply these results to the rapid development of a process for extracting a critical metal from recycled electronic components from printed circuit boards (SCARCE joint laboratory).
Expected results: publications, proprietary software package and possible patents on the new processes developed.

Laboratory

Institut rayonnement et matière de Saclay
Service Nanosciences et Innovation pour les Materiaux, la Biomédecine et l’Energie
Laboratoire Innovation, Chimie des Surfaces Et Nanosciences
Paris-Saclay
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