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Contribution Details

Type Journal Article
Scope Discipline-based scholarship
Title Where Do Our Resources Go? Indium, Neodymium, and Gold Flows Connected to the Use of Electronic Equipment in Switzerland
Organization Unit
Authors
  • Esther Thiébaud
  • Lorenz Hilty
  • Mathias Schluep
  • Heinz W Böni
  • Martin Faulstich
Item Subtype Original Work
Refereed Yes
Status Published in final form
Language
  • English
Journal Title Sustainability
Publisher MDPI Publishing
Geographical Reach international
ISSN 2071-1050
Volume 10
Number 8
Page Range 2658
Date 2018
Abstract Text The increased use of digital information and communications technologies (ICT) is giving rise to fast-growing waste streams that contain important material resources. In contrast to bulk materials and precious metals, the recovery of most critical metals has not yet been commercially established, and they are thus lost within the recycling process. In this article, we used dynamic material flow analysis to explore the stocks and flows of indium, neodymium, and gold incorporated in end-user devices in Switzerland. Our analysis covered the use, collection, recycling, and disposal phases. This enabled us to track the three metals from their entry into Switzerland as components of new devices until their recovery, disposal in landfills, or dissipation to the environment. Using statistical entropy analysis (SEA), we further analyzed the dilution or concentration of the metals during their route through the current system. The data uncertainty was addressed employing a probabilistic approach. The largest quantities of all three metals are found in the devices currently in use. The second-largest stocks are slags disposed in landfills for indium, slags used for construction for neodymium, and the output of metal recovery processes for gold. The SEA illustrates how the current collection and recycling system successfully concentrates all three metals. While 70% of gold leaving the use phase is recovered, indium and neodymium are dissipated to slags after smelting and incineration processes due to the lack of economic incentives and lacking recovery processes on a commercial scale.
Free access at DOI
Digital Object Identifier 10.3390/su10082658
Other Identification Number merlin-id:16682
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