Science - USA (2020-08-21)

(Antfer) #1

P


ractical and glamorous, aluminum
is prized for making products from
kitchen foil and beverage cans
to Tesla Roadsters and aircraft.
But the silvery metal—abundant,
cheap, lightweight, and corrosion
resistant—has a dark side: red
mud. This brownish red slurry, a
caustic mishmash of metal- and
silicon-rich oxides, often with a dash of ra-
dioactive and rare earth elements, is what’s
left after aluminum is extracted from ore.
And it is piling up. Globally, some 3 billion
tons of red mud are now stored in massive
waste ponds or dried mounds, making it
one of the most abundant industrial wastes
on the planet. Aluminum plants generate

an additional 150 million tons each year.
Red mud has become trouble looking for
a place to happen. In 2010, an earthen dam
at one waste pond in Hungary gave way, un-
leashing a 2-meter-high wall of red mud that
buried the town of Ajka, killing 10 people and
giving 150 severe chemical burns. (For more
on the dangers posed by waste dams, see p.
907.) Even when red mud remains contained,
its extreme alkalinity can leach out, poison
groundwater, and contaminate nearby rivers
and ecosystems. Such liabilities, as well as
growing regulatory pressure on industry to
develop sustainable practices, have catalyzed
global efforts to find ways to recycle and re-
use red mud. Some researchers are develop-
ing ways to extract the valuable rare earth

metals, whereas others turn the mud into ce-
ment or bricks.
“There is hope here,” says Yiannis
Pontikes, a mechanical engineer at the
Catholic University of Leuven. But eco-
nomic and marketing hurdles remain, and
“the clock is ticking” as regulators consider
new controls, says Efthymios Balomenos, a
metallurgical engineer at the National Tech-
nical University of Athens. “At some point
we will not be able to produce waste. So,
there is an urgent need to make changes.”

ALUMINUM IS ONE of the most commonly
recycled materials, with 75% of all alumi-
num ever produced still in use. But there
is an ever-burgeoning demand. Aluminum

sciencemag.org SCIENCE

Researchers are working to find new


uses for red mud, the caustic byproduct


of aluminum production


By Robert F. Service


RED ALERT

PHOTO: BELA SZANDELSZKY/AP PHOTO

910 21 AUGUST 2020 • VOL 369 ISSUE 6506
Published by AAAS
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