Archive:000/Minerals/table: Difference between revisions

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|colspan="6" align="center"|Mining
|colspan="6" align="center"|'''Mining'''
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|colspan="4" align="center"|Recycling
|colspan="4" align="center"|'''Recycling'''
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!Mineral
!Mineral

Revision as of 04:22, 16 February 2023

Mining Recycling
Mineral Labor
intensity
(hours/tonne)
Energy
intensity
(GJ/tonne)
Land
intensity
(m2/tonne)
Global
production
(tonnes/year)
Global
reserves
(tonnes)
Global
resources
(tonnes)
Note Labor
intensity
(hours/tonne)
Energy
intensity
(GJ/tonne)
Global
production
(tonnes/year)
Global
presenceDefined as: The total amount ever mined to date. This could theoretically be seen as a "resource" to eventually recycle.
(tonnes)
Aluminium (Al)
Cement
Cobalt (Co)
Copper (Cu)
Graphite (C)
Iron (Fe)
Lithium (Li)
Nickel (Ni)
PGMs Platinum-group metals (Pt, Pd, Rh, Ir, Ru, Os)
Sand
Silver (Ag)
Thorium (Th)
Uranium (U) The energy density of uranium is much higher, at 574699 GJ/tonne for conventional nuclear reactors, and 82099829 GJ/tonne as a theoretical maximum for breeder reactors.

Uranium occurs in nature as a mix of two isotopes: U235 (0.7%) and U238 (99.3%). Conventional nuclear reactors can only make use of the U235 component.