Your old phone is full of untapped precious metals (2024)

By Bianca Nogrady18th October 2016

There’s gold, platinum and other valuable materials in every phone – the hard part is getting it out.

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Your old phone is full of untapped precious metals (1)

A diamond-encrusted iPhone can set you back $95m – but if this piece of i-bling is a little out of your price range, don’t feel despondent. Every smartphone contains precious metals including gold, silver, copper, platinum and palladium.

This is more than just an amusing detail about the device that never leaves your side. These precious metals are now looking more precious than ever, as we face the prospect of one day being no longer able to afford to dig them out of the ground. Suddenly your smartphone is looking a lot more valuable than you might think.

The hidden value of the metals inside our old electronics, and how we might best extract those materials is one of the topics that will be discussed at BBC Future’s World Changing Ideas Summit in Sydney in November.

WHAT EXACTLY IS IN MY SMARTPHONE?

Smartphones are pocket-sized vaults of precious metals and rare earths. A typical iPhone is estimated to house around 0.034g of gold, 0.34g of silver, 0.015g of palladium and less than one-thousandth of a gram of platinum. It also contains the less valuable but still significant aluminium (25g) and copper (around 15g).

Your old phone is full of untapped precious metals (2)

From phones to computers, Guiyu in China processes much of the world's e-waste - in 2008, up to 80% of material processed there came from overseas (Credit: Getty Images)

One tonne of iPhones would deliver 300 times more gold than a tonne of gold ore and 6.5 times more silver than a tonne of silver ore

And that’s just the start. Smartphones also contain a range of rare earth elements – elements that are actually plentiful in the Earth’s crust but extremely difficult to mine and extract economically – including yttrium, lanthanum, terbium, neodymium, gadolinium and praseodymium.

Then there’s also the plastic, the glass, the battery… it’s a very long list of ingredients.

These are all present in relatively small amounts. But more than two billion people currently have a smartphone, and that number is projected to increase. What’s more, the concentration of some of these elements, such as gold and silver in a mobile phone is actually much higher than their concentration in an equivalent weight of ore. One tonne of iPhones would deliver 300 times more gold than a tonne of gold ore and 6.5 times more silver than a tonne of silver ore.

WHY IS THIS A PROBLEM?

Because those two billion smartphone users upgrade to a new phone roughly every 11 months, which means their old smartphone gets cast into a drawer somewhere and forgotten about, or it gets thrown out. Barely 10% of these get recycled and their precious components recovered and reused. It’s a veritable goldmine sitting in cupboards, in boxes, in landfill. In an era when the prefix ‘peak’ is starting to be added to a whole lot of resources as well as oil, it makes economic and environmental sense to avoiding wasting such valuable substances.

WHAT HAPPENS TO THESE RESOURCES WHEN A SMARTPHONE BECOMES OBSOLETE?

In case you’re thinking of trying a little electronic gold mining at the individual scale, the miniscule amounts in each smartphone should make you think twice. But once you start thinking at the big scale, it looks a lot more attractive: one million mobile phones could deliver nearly 16 tonnes of copper, 350kg of silver, 34kg of gold and 15kg of palladium.

The challenge is how to recover those minerals and materials safely and economically. A significant proportion of e-waste – including mobile phones – gets exported or dumped in countries such as China where poorly paid workers and children are reported to be used to break apart these electronics, often using dangerous chemicals to get to the valuable components. One town in south-eastern China called Guiyu has claimed the dubious distinction of being the largest e-waste site in the world. It’s causing terrible health problems for its residents and polluting the soil, rivers and air with mercury, arsenic, chromium and lead.

Even e-waste that is recycled in its country of origin poses a challenge. In Australia, for example, recycling of e-waste still involves industrial smelting which is high cost and far from environmentally-benign.

Your old phone is full of untapped precious metals (3)

Electronic devices contain many precious metals and rare earth elements, but much of it is extracted in polluting, toxic places such as Guiyu in China (Credit: Getty Images)

THERE MUST BE A BETTER WAY?

Of course there is. Ideally, we’d stop changing our smartphones faster than we change our underpants. But recognising that changing consumer behaviour is probably the least viable option, we need to come up with something better.

Materials scientist Veena Sahajwalla from the University of New South Wales is taking a small-scale approach to a global problem. Sahajwalla, who will be presenting at BBC Future’s WCIS event in November, sees the future in “micro-factories”, one in every community, that can safely, cleanly and efficiently extract all the valuable metals from obsolete mobile phones and incinerate the rest.

Her approach is very hands-off, minimising the need for human contact with the more dangerous materials inside smartphones. The mobile phone is smashed apart using high-voltage current. Then the valuable printed circuit boards are retrieved by a robotic arm, and fed into a tiny furnace that uses precisely-controlled, high-temperature reactions to draw out the valuable metal alloys. Any toxic or unwanted materials can then be safely incinerated.

The whole set-up is contained in something the size of a shipping container, which could make it the ultimate cottage industry for someone looking for gold in them thar mountains of e-waste. Who knows – do it for long enough and you might well be able to build your own solid-gold, diamond encrusted smartphone.

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Your old phone is full of untapped precious metals (2024)

FAQs

Are there any precious metals in old cell phones? ›

The precious metal is hidden in more than 80 million old and no longer used cell phones, each of which contains almost 25 milligrams of gold.

How much precious metal is in a cell phone? ›

There is actual gold in your phone, used because of its excellent conductivity and resistance to corrosion. However, the amount of gold contained in a phone is smaller than one might expect. On average, a smartphone might have around 0.034 grams of gold.

What are 3 metals that can be recovered from phones? ›

Every smartphone contains precious metals including gold, silver, copper, platinum and palladium.

What are the metals found in your cellphone? ›

Gallium provides light emitting diode (LED) backlighting. Bauxite is the pri- mary source of this commodity. Sphalerite is the source of indium (used in the screen's conductive coating) and germanium (used in displays and LEDs). The content of copper in a mobile device far exceeds the amount of any other metal.

How much gold is in one SIM card? ›

The amount of gold in SIM cards is very small, usually measured in milligrams or even micrograms. For example, a typical SIM card may contain around 8 milligrams of gold, which is equivalent to 0.00028 ounces. This means that you would need around 3,571 SIM cards to get one ounce of gold.

Are older cell phones worth anything? ›

It could be worth big bucks. Shockingly, your phone that's a few years old might be considered vintage. An unopened first edition iPhone recently earned a bid of over $39,000, and more than a few older smartphone models appear to be attracting similarly-interested collectors (and their pocketbooks).

How much silver is in a cell phone? ›

The University of Plymouth scientists found that each phone contains roughly 90mg of silver and 36mg of gold. That comes to roughly 4.3 million oz of silver and 1.7 million oz of gold in the 1.5 billion smartphones produced each year.

What metal in phones is rare? ›

Germanium. Germanium is used to make the semiconductors in cell phones. This silvery white, brittle element is commonly used in a host of electrical devices. The rare mineral is found in rock deposits of germanite and argyrodite, as well as in zinc ore.

How much gold is in an iPhone 13? ›

Take apart a typical iPhone and inside you will find about 0.034g of high-grade gold —about £1.60 worth — 0.34g of silver, 0.015g of palladium and a tiny fraction — less than one-thousandth of a gram — of platinum.

How much platinum is in a phone? ›

Platinum. —The average price of platinum for the period 2002 through 2004 was $696 per troy ounce (Hilliard, 2005b). At this average price, a cell phone contains less than 1 cent worth of platinum.

Are there crystals in phones? ›

Quartz (Si)

Silica, an element found in quartz, is used to make chips and microprocessors in mobile phones....

What part of cell phones are gold? ›

Gold is used in mobile phone circuit boards because it is chemically stable and conducts electricity.

How many cell phones to make an ounce of gold? ›

Did you know, for example, that it only takes around 41 mobile phones to recover 1g of gold? The price of gold is currently around US$1,700 (£1,365) per ounce, which is roughly US$60 per gram. That means there's about US$1.50 of gold in every junked device.

What is the rare metal in cell phones? ›

Germanium is used to make the semiconductors in cell phones. This silvery white, brittle element is commonly used in a host of electrical devices. The rare mineral is found in rock deposits of germanite and argyrodite, as well as in zinc ore.

What electronics have the most gold content? ›

Smartphones: Smartphones are the electronic devices with the highest gold content, and the amount of gold in a smartphone ranges from 0.03 to 0.05 ounces. Computers: Computers, including desktops, laptops, and servers, contain gold in their circuit boards and connectors.

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