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szdaily -> Lifestyle -> 
X-ray film-recovered silver for jewelry collection
    2024-01-05  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

LOOKING at an X-ray film you might spot fractured bones or even floating foreign objects — but hidden within the film itself there is a tiny amount of silver. Now, The Royal Mint, the U.K.’s oldest company and official maker of British coins, is using that silver to create jewelry.

To source the silver, it has teamed up with Betts Metals, a company based in Birmingham, England, that has recovered precious metals from waste for more than 250 years.

Betts collects used X-ray film that is no longer needed by hospitals and is otherwise destined for landfill or incineration, explained Charlie Betts, the company’s managing director.

The film goes through a machine that chops it into small pieces, before chemical processing is used to separate the silver. It’s then smelted and transferred to another site, where it is refined to 99.9% purity, just like any other source of fine silver.

Hospitals receive the monetary value of the reclaimed silver. Betts notes that the amount of silver can vary greatly between X-ray films and many tons of film is needed to make its recovery cost effective.

The X-ray silver recovered by Betts is being used by other jewelers, including London-based Angharad, but the Royal Mint also extracts gold from electronic waste. It uses “world-first chemistry” from Canadian company Excir, which it says is able to recover more than 99% of precious metals within minutes from electronic waste (known as e-waste) such as laptop circuit boards and mobile phones.

Each year, more than 50 million metric tons of e-waste is produced globally. Less than 20% is recycled worldwide, resulting in precious metals valued at US$57 billion being thrown away or forgotten about instead of reused. Some of that goes to landfill, and can end up contaminating the soil and leaching into groundwater. Mining for new precious metals can also contaminate water sources, as well as scar pristine landscapes.

This year, The Royal Mint is set to open a new Precious Metals Recovery plant that will be capable of processing 4,000 metric tons of the U.K.’s e-waste each year, according to Sean Millard, The Royal Mint’s chief growth officer.

“Our X-ray silver and e-waste gold projects provide a source of provenance for our precious metals,” said Millard. “[They] are an important step in reducing The Royal Mint’s reliance on mined materials.”

The X-ray silver and e-waste gold are used in The Royal Mint’s 886 jewelry collection, and perform exactly the same as metals that are mined, according to Dominic Jones, creative director for 886.

For Jones, it’s not just about recycling — it’s about preserving precious metals that have already been mined. He says 7% of the world’s entire gold reserve is stored in the form of broken laptops and old cell phones.

“The idea that this material is there unused, when we are still pulling up new materials, doesn’t sit well with me,” Jones said. “X-ray silver is exactly the same: This is a previously unused source of silver that has been lying dormant until now.”

(SD-Agencies)

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