Australia looks to mining waste for cutting-edge chip materials

Extracting gallium, germanium could be strategically if not commercially important

20241022 Gladstone alumina refinery

Gladstone alumina refinery, the largest in the world, Gladstone, Queensland, Australia. © Getty Images

SHAUN TURTON, Nikkei staff writer

SYDNEY -- Scientists in Australia are looking at mining waste to potentially supply the world with materials essential for cutting-edge semiconductors and other advanced technologies.

Chemist Chris Vernon, lead researcher for green mineral technologies at the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO), part of a multiagency effort to study Australia's potential to extract gallium and germanium as by-products from existing mining operations.

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