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Silver is a depleted precious resource and in the near future it all be used up. In addition to this, our country is not produced the metal at this moment. Extracting silver from enough silver containing wastes like used X-ray photographic film will considerably save the foreign currency to import this metal. The waste X-ray photographic films containing 1.5-2% (w/w) black metallic silver would be used for recovery and reuse. Around 18-20% of the world's silver needs are supplied by recycling photographic waste. Extraction of silver from the ore is expensive and harmful to the environment.…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Silver is a depleted precious resource and in the near future it all be used up. In addition to this, our country is not produced the metal at this moment. Extracting silver from enough silver containing wastes like used X-ray photographic film will considerably save the foreign currency to import this metal. The waste X-ray photographic films containing 1.5-2% (w/w) black metallic silver would be used for recovery and reuse. Around 18-20% of the world's silver needs are supplied by recycling photographic waste. Extraction of silver from the ore is expensive and harmful to the environment. Global demand for silver remains steadily increasing from 25,700 metric tons in 2016 to 30,500 metric tons in 2021. Most photographic and X-ray wastes contain silver thiosulphate with silver at a concentration of 5 parts per million (ppm). Several technologies exist to recover silver from X-ray photographic film such as burning the film, electrolysis, metal replacement, chemical precipitation and bacterial, enzymatic methods.
Autorenporträt
H Rehana Anjum, working as Assistant Professor(Ad-hoc) in Department of Chemical engineering, JNTUACEA. She studies M. Tech (Chemical Engineering) in SV University and B. Tech (Chemical Engineering) in JNTUACEA.