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==== Copper ====
 
==== Copper ====
 
Sulfur dioxide produced in making copper is equivalent to 1/4 the sulfur dioxide emisions of all industrial nations combined.  1kg of copper requires
 
Sulfur dioxide produced in making copper is equivalent to 1/4 the sulfur dioxide emisions of all industrial nations combined.  1kg of copper requires
excavating 127kg of ore and 136kg of other rock and the equivalent of 275 liters of petoleum was consumed.  [http://www.iied.org/mmsd/mmsd_pdfs/041_rabago.pdf]  Copper is somewhat toxic.  And it is a scarce and valuable resource.  Copper prices are high enough that people steal copper wiring and pipes out of unoccupied buildings (destroying the buildings in the process).
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excavating 127kg of ore and 136kg of other rock and the equivalent of 275 liters of petoleum was consumed.  [http://www.iied.org/mmsd/mmsd_pdfs/041_rabago.pdf]  Copper is somewhat toxic.  And it is a scarce and valuable resource.  Copper prices are high enough that people steel copper wiring and pipes out of unoccupied buildings (destroying the buildings in the process).
 
Copper can be recovered from PCB etchant by electrolysis. [http://www.p2pays.org/ref/10/09283.htm]  It also saves on etchant replacement and disposal.  They spent 55,000 English Pounds to set it up but it paid for itself in two years.  This may be possible to do on a smaller scale.  Copper used on printed circuit boards is usually produced by electrodepositing copper onto a rotating drum (Printed Circuits Handbook); this particular process, though often done by the panel manufacturer and not the PCB fab, appears to be compatible with reclaimed copper (no need to remelt it).  It appears that electrodes used in the reclamation process can be transfered to the plating bath for panel plating, pattern plating, or making electrodeposited foil sheets, provided the baths are kept well filtered.  In a double sided circuit board, most of the copper on the board is electroplated onto the board (starting with a thin foil), thus plating the holes.
 
Copper can be recovered from PCB etchant by electrolysis. [http://www.p2pays.org/ref/10/09283.htm]  It also saves on etchant replacement and disposal.  They spent 55,000 English Pounds to set it up but it paid for itself in two years.  This may be possible to do on a smaller scale.  Copper used on printed circuit boards is usually produced by electrodepositing copper onto a rotating drum (Printed Circuits Handbook); this particular process, though often done by the panel manufacturer and not the PCB fab, appears to be compatible with reclaimed copper (no need to remelt it).  It appears that electrodes used in the reclamation process can be transfered to the plating bath for panel plating, pattern plating, or making electrodeposited foil sheets, provided the baths are kept well filtered.  In a double sided circuit board, most of the copper on the board is electroplated onto the board (starting with a thin foil), thus plating the holes.
  

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