Alkaline industrial
wastes (e.g., slags: ordered crystalline solids,
and fly ashes: disordered solids) represent abundant reservoirs of
elements such as silicon and calcium. Rapid elemental extractions
from these wastes, however, have often relied on the use of “stoichiometric
additives” (i.e., acids or bases). Herein, we demonstrate that
acoustic stimulation enhances the release of network-forming Si species
from crystalline blast furnace slags and amorphous fly ashes at reaction
temperatures less than 65 °C. These additive-free enhancements
are induced by cavitation processes which reduce the apparent activation
energy of solute dissolution (E
a, kJ/mol)
by up to 40% as compared to unstimulated conditions. Because of the
reduction in the apparent activation energy, acoustic stimulation
features an energy intensity that is up to 80% lower in promoting
dissolution, as compared to other additive-free methods such as enhancing
the solute’s surface area, introducing heat, or convectively
mixing the solvent. Based on atomic topology analysis, we show that
the reduction in apparent dissolution activation energy upon acoustic
stimulation scales with the number of weak topological constraints
per atom in the atomic network of the dissolving solute, independent
of their ordered or disordered nature. This suggests that sonication
breaks the weakest constraints in the solute’s atomic network,
which, in turn, facilitates dissolution. The results suggest the ability
of acoustic stimulation to enhance waste utilization and circularity,
by enabling efficient resource extraction from industrial wastes.