Phytomining For Nickel 15
jvl001 writes "The Globe and Mail has an interesting article about Inco's attempts to extract nickel from a plant (alyssum) grown on nickel rich soil. Selective breeding and bacterial adjuncts are capable of producing a plant that once incinerated may produce ash with up to 30% nickel. Waste heat from the incineration process may be used for power generation. A neat way of making use of use of land otherwise unusable for agriculture. In this case unusable because of past Inco activity."
Can this reclaim land? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Can this reclaim land? (Score:5, Informative)
Of course, the practicality depends on the level of concentration and the efficiency of the plants. . .
This sounds cool, but... (Score:2, Interesting)
It would be nice if this worked in the real world, especially if such techniques could be extended to other minerals, pollutants, etc.
Pollution controls seem to be built-in... (Score:1)
Since they're burning plants, the process is close to CO2-neutral. The plants take in CO2 as they grow which is re-emitted when they burn. When burned in a (presumably) oxygen-rich mining furnace, CO and NOx emissions are probably fairly low.
The entire point of the process is to recover ash and other particulates, so one would expect fairly tight control of those, too.
-boredman
Re:This sounds cool, but... (Score:2)
Actually it can (and does). Back in my old university, there were a couple of profs who studied it. One even found a plant that would take up gold out of the soil, after treatment with thiocynate ions.
Extracting Nickel from a plant? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Extracting Nickel from a plant? (Score:2)
technical yes, but oh well
Medevo
Great to see phytoremediation in action! (Score:1)