Highlights
- Egyptian researchers developed zirconium oxide nanoparticles using pomegranate peel extract that selectively adsorb rare earths like lanthanum, europium, and samarium from acidic solutions with 94-96% efficiency at pH 3.5.
- The green synthesis method avoids harsh chemicals, demonstrates recyclability across five cycles, and represents a cleaner alternative to conventional rare earth separation processes dominated by China.
- While laboratory-scale only, this research signals growing global efforts to develop scalable, environmentally friendly rare earth processing technologies that could diversify supply chains and reduce environmental liabilities.
Researchers led by A. El-Tantawy and I. M. Ali at the Egyptian Atomic Energy Authority report a new โgreen synthesisโ method for producing zirconium oxide (ZrOโ) nanoparticles capable of selectively adsorbing rare earth elements, including lanthanum, europium, and samarium, from acidic solutions. Published in Scientific Reports, the study used pomegranate peel extract as a plant-based synthesis agent, avoiding harsher chemical routes while demonstrating strong rare earth recovery performance, recyclability across five cycles, and adsorption efficiencies exceeding 90% under optimized conditions.
The study matters because separating rare earth elements remains one of the most difficult, expensive, and environmentally controversial steps in the supply chain. China dominates this midstream processing stage globally. The Egyptian team explored whether greener nanosorbents could eventually help lower environmental burdens tied to rare earth refining.
How the Study Worked
The scientists synthesized nano-scale zirconium oxide particles using pomegranate peel extract and tested them against acidic solutions containing Laยณโบ, Euยณโบ, and Smยณโบ ions. Using adsorption experiments, microscopy, X-ray diffraction, and thermodynamic analysis, they found that optimal recovery occurred near pH 3.5, with adsorption efficiencies of 94โ96%.
The material also retained strong performance after repeated regeneration cycles using nitric acid.
Why Investors Should Pay Attention
This is not yet a commercial breakthrough. Adsorption capacity remained moderate compared with some competing materials, and the study was conducted only at the laboratory scale. Industrial rare-earth separation still largely relies on cascading solvent extraction systems.
Still, the research highlights an important trend: global efforts to develop cleaner, lower-cost, less chemically intensive separation technologies. If scalable, such systems could eventually help diversify rare earth processing outside China while reducing environmental liabilities.
Citation: El-Tantawy A., Ali I.M. Eco-friendly obtained zirconium oxide crystals for efficient separation of rare earth elements from acidic media. Scientific Reports (2026). DOI: 10.1038/s41598-026-48985-3.
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