• Estudo de caso

Watson-Marlow pumps provide ideal solution for lithium extraction at Cornish Lithium test plant

cornish lithium
  • Cornish Lithium building robust supply chain based on local expertise
  • Five 500 series pumps from Falmouth-based Watson-Marlow prove vital in bench-scale operations
  • More 530 pumps – plus a Qdos 120 – required for subsequent project phase

A demonstration plant that can be used to trial the extraction of lithium from geothermal waters is located at Cornish Lithium’s Shallow Geothermal Test Site. The plant uses five 500 series cased peristaltic pumps from Watson-Marlow Fluid Technology Solutions as part of the processing equipment. Cornish Lithium is now working on an upgraded version of the test plant as its drilling programme expands, ultimately with the aim of developing an efficient, sustainable and cost-effective lithium extraction supply chain.

Battery metals are vital as the planet transitions to more environmentally responsible transportation and infrastructure. As an innovative mineral extraction company, Cornish Lithium is focussing on the sustainable extraction of lithium and other battery metals in the historically significant mining district of Cornwall.

Venturing forward

The initial enquiry for pumps came from GeoCubed, a joint venture between Cornish Lithium and Geothermal Engineering Ltd (GEL). GEL owns a deep borehole site at United Downs in Cornwall, where plans are in place to commission a £4 million pilot plant by the end of March 2022.

“GeoCubed’s process engineers helped us to design and commission the test plant ahead of the G7, which would run on shallow geothermal waters extracted from Cornish Lithium’s own research boreholes,” explains Dr Rebecca Paisley, Exploration Geochemist at Cornish Lithium.

Adam Matthews, Exploration Geologist at Cornish Lithium, takes up the story: “Our shallow site centres on a borehole that we drilled in 2019. A special borehole pump [not Watson-Marlow] extracts the geothermal water [mildly saline, lithium-enriched water] and feeds into the demonstration processing plant.”

Extraction and separation

The five Watson-Marlow 530SN/R2 pumps serve two different parts of the test plant, the first of which extracts lithium from the waters by pumping the brine from a container up through a column containing a large number of beads.

 

“The great thing about having these five pumps is that we can use them to help evaluate other technologies moving forward... lithium extraction from the type of waters we find in Cornwall is not undertaken anywhere else in the world"

Dr Rebecca Paisley, Exploration Geochemist at Cornish Lithium

“The beads have an active ingredient on their surface that is selective for lithium. As water is pumped through the column, lithium ions attach to the beads,” explains Paisley. “With the lithium separated, we use two Watson-Marlow 530s to pump an acidic solution in various concentrations through the column. The acid serves to remove lithium from the beads, which we then transfer to a separate container. The pumps are peristaltic, so nothing but the tube comes into contact with the acid solution.”

“We’re using the remaining 530 series pumps to help understand what other by-products we can make from the water,” says Paisley. “For instance, we can reuse the water for secondary processes in industry and agriculture. For this reason, we have two other columns working in unison to strip all other elements from the water as we pump it through.”

In full flow

According to Matthews, flow rate was among the primary reasons for selecting Watson-Marlow pumps.

“The column needed a flow rate of 1-2 l/min to fit with our test scale, so the 530 pumps were ideal,” he says. “The other consideration was choosing between manual or automated pumps. At the time, because it was bench scale, we went for manual, as we knew it would be easy to make adjustments while we were still experimenting with process parameters. However, any future commercial lithium extraction system would of course take advantage of full automation.”

“The great thing about having these five pumps is that we can use them to help evaluate other technologies moving forward,” says Paisley. “Lithium extraction from the type of waters we find in Cornwall is not undertaken anywhere else in the world on any scale – the water chemistry here is unique. It is really important for us to undertake on-site test work with a variety of different companies and technologies. We want to devise the most environmentally responsible solution using the optimum lithium recovery method, at the lowest possible operating cost. Using local companies is part of our strategy, particularly as continuity of supply is vital.”

More pumps

To help fulfil the requirements of the next test plant, Cornish Lithium has enquired after more 530SN/R2 pumps from Watson-Marlow, which has its UK headquarters at Falmouth, less than 4 miles from Cornish Lithium’s office at the Tremough Innovation Centre in Penryn.

“We’ve also requested a quote for a Qdos 120 dosing pump from Watson-Marlow, so we can add a certain amount of acid into the system and achieve pH balance,” says Matthews. “We’ll be doing more drilling in the coming 12 months, which will allow us to test our technology on multiple sites.”

Featured products

  1. Bombas de processo 530

    Bombas de processo 530

    Vazões de até 3,5 l/min (55 USGPH) e pressões de até 7 bar (100 psi). Faixa precisa de controle de velocidade de 2.200:1.

    Bombas - bombas microprocessadas