14 May
2024
CleanTech Lithium PLC ("CleanTech
Lithium", "CTL" or the "Company")
DLE Pilot Plant Produces High Quality
Eluate
CleanTech Lithium PLC (AIM:CTL,
Frankfurt:T2N, OTCQX:CTLHF) an
exploration and development company advancing sustainable lithium
projects in Chile, announces highly encouraging results from the
processing of brine from Laguna Verde at the Company´s Direct
Lithium Extraction (DLE) pilot plant in Copiapó, Chile.
Highlights:
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The DLE pilot plant has produced high quality
eluate with low impurities
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The performance of the DLE process is based on
the composition of the eluate achieving key metrics of:
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A lithium grade in feed brine of 196mg/L was
concentrated to 710mg/L in the eluate, or a 3.6X concentration
factor
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Lithium adsorption recovery rate of
94%
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Rejection rates over 99% for key contaminants
calcium, magnesium, potassium, sodium and sulphate
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A reverse osmosis unit at the DLE pilot plant
is used to concentrate the eluate prior to shipment, concentrating
the test batch from a lithium grade of 710mg/L in the eluate to
2,194mg/L in the concentrated eluate
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An initial 200L of concentrated eluate has been
sent to a third-party processor in North America for test work to
set up the process plant for conversion of eluate into battery
grade lithium carbonate
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CTL will ship batches of 24m3 of the
concentrated eluate for conversion with the first batch scheduled
for later this month
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The pilot plant in Copiapó has demonstrated
that it can operate at the designed capacity of concentrated eluate
production sufficient for conversion to 1 tonne per month of
battery grade lithium carbonate
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This places CleanTech Lithium at the forefront
of exploration companies in Chile and the wider sector, in its
ability to make available large samples of lithium
carbonate product to potential strategic and offtake partners
seeking to start product qualification
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Steve Kesler,
Executive Chairman, of CleanTech Lithium PLC,
said:
"The analysis
of the eluate shows the DLE performance has exceeded our
expectations, concentrating the lithium grade of the feed brine by
3.6X while achieving high recovery rates and low impurities. The
first full batch of 24m3 of concentrated eluate is
scheduled to be shipped in the coming weeks. The pilot plant has
met its design capacity capable of producing 1 tonne of LCE per
month, positioning CleanTech Lithium to produce significant
quantities of lithium product samples for potential strategic
partners. We are edging closer to be one of the first DLE based
companies in Chile to produce battery-grade lithium
carbonate."
Further
Information
The Company´s DLE pilot plant is
in Copiapó, Chile,
approximately 250km from Laguna Verde, and finished commissioning
in late March. At the R&D centre where the pilot plant is
located, brine from the Laguna Verde project is stored in a large
243,000 litre vessel outside the pilot plant and then fed into an
indoor tank having passed through filtration to remove suspended
solids. It is then fed into the DLE columns shown in Figure 1,
which are filled with adsorbent designed to be selective for
lithium molecules. Lithium, as lithium chloride, is adsorbed from
the brine, before desorption with water to create a purified
lithium chloride eluate.
A reverse osmosis (RO) unit at the
DLE pilot plant, as shown in Figure 2, then concentrates the eluate
by extracting approximately 75% of the water before this
concentrated eluate is shipped to the facilities of Conductive
Energy in Chicago, USA for conversion into battery grade lithium
carbonate. A 200L batch of concentrated eluate was recently air
freighted to Conductive Energy for test-work to optimise the
planned conversion process before larger volumes of concentrated
eluate, which will be shipped in 24m3 containers, are
dispatched with the first such shipment scheduled for later this
month.

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Fig. 1: Pilot Plant Multi-Valve Feeding Brine to DLE Columns
(approx. 2.5 metres high)
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Fig. 2: Reverse Osmosis Unit Used to Concentrate Eluate at the
Pilot Plant
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Brine is processed at the DLE pilot
plant in cycles where each cycle represents the 30-hour sequence of
adsorption, displacement wash and desorption using all 30 of the
DLE columns to process the feed brine into eluate. The 200L test
batch provides a representative sample taken from the first two DLE
cycles completed at the pilot plant. Analysis of the feed brine,
eluate and concentrated eluate is provided in Table 1
below.
Element (ions)
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Unit
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Feed Brine
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Eluate
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Concentrated
Eluate
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Boron (B)
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mg/L
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451
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279
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411
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Calcium (Ca)
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mg/L
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640
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2
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7
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Chloride (Cl)
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mg/L
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70,893
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3,429
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11,039
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Lithium (Li)
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mg/L
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197
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710
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2,194
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Magnesium (Mg)
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mg/L
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2,293
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4
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14
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Potassium (K)
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mg/L
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4,533
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0
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0
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Sodium (Na)
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mg/L
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48,776
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20
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134
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Sulphate (SO4)
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mg/L
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7,768
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91
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103
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Total Dissolve Solids
(TDS)
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mg/L
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142,432
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4,837
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19,260
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Table 1: Composition of Feed Brine, Eluate and Concentrated
Eluate (Major Ions)
The concentration of lithium from
197mg/L in the feed brine to 710mg/L in the eluate is 3.6X, which
is considered to be a very positive result. DLE primarily acts as a
purification stage, recovering lithium chloride from the brine
whilst rejecting other impurities. For all the major ions in the
brine, apart from boron, the rejection rate was 99% or higher and
almost 100% for the largest impurity in the brine which is sodium,
as shown in Table 2 below. The adsorbent shows very good
selectivity for these ions with extremely high selectivity for
lithium to sodium.
The low selectivity for boron is
expected with the Company´s process flow sheet, as described in the
completed Laguna Verde scoping study, which includes a boron
removal stage using ion exchange. The current process flow sheet
also includes a nano-filtration stage for magnesium and calcium as
a high-level purification of these two elements is required before
conversion to battery grade lithium carbonate. The very low levels
of these two elements in the eluate indicates nanofiltration may
not be required. CleanTech Lithium´s process team is also working
on solutions that would reduce or eliminate the requirement for the
Boron removal stage to further simplify the process.
Element (ion)
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Rejection in
Eluate
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Boron (B)
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38.1%
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Calcium (Ca)
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99.7%
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Magnesium (Mg)
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99.8%
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Potassium (K)
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100.0%
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Sodium (Na)
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100.0%
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Sulphate (SO4)
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98.8%
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Table 2: DLE Performance - Rejection of Major
Impurities
The recovery rate in Cycle 2 was 94%
in adsorption with an overall recovery after desorption of 89%.
The desorption recovery rate is expected to be further
optimised as the pilot plant stabilises over more operational
cycles. The production rate achieved was 2.57 kg LCE/hr which meets
or exceeds the design capacity of the plant.
Downstream Processing into Battery Grade Lithium
Carbonate
For the conversion of the
concentrated lithium chloride eluate into battery grade lithium
carbonate, CleanTech Lithium has engaged a leading lithium
concentration and refining company, Conductive Energy, based in
Alberta, Canada, which has a conversion facility in Chicago, USA
(see Figure 3). Concentrated eluate will be shipped in
batches of 24m3, which corresponds to a shipping
container, to the port of Los Angeles before transiting to
Chicago.

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Figure 3: Conductive Energy - Milling and Refining Equipment,
Continuously Stirred Tank Reactor, and Lithium Carbonate product
(pictures left to right)
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The first step will be to further
concentrate the eluate using Forward Osmosis (FO), with the FO unit
provided by Forward Water Technology, another Canadian company
based in Ontario. FO achieves a high concentration factor with low
energy use. Following FO, the conversion process stages undertaken
by Conductive Energy, involve polishing by ion exchange to remove
trace impurities, carbonation to precipitate lithium carbonate,
solid/liquid separation and drying. These standard industry
processes for lithium carbonate production are reflective of the
conversion process CleanTech Lithium plans to use at a commercial
scale for the Laguna Verde project.
Samples of the lithium carbonate
product will be analysed by Conductive Energy and a third-party
independent laboratory to confirm the benchmark of 99.5%
Li2CO3 is achieved for battery grade lithium
carbonate. The product will be packaged for shipping to potential
strategic partners and off-takers for product verification in the
coming months.
Competent
Persons
The following professional acts as qualified
person, as defined in the AIM Note for Mining, Oil and Gas
Companies (June 2009) and JORC Code (2012):
Marcelo Bravo: Chemical Engineer (Universidad
Católica del Norte), has a Master's Degree in Engineering Sciences
major in Mineral Processing, Universidad de Antofagasta. He
currently works as a Senior Process Consulting Engineer at the
Ad-Infinitum company. Mr Bravo has relevant experience in
researching and developing potassium, lithium carbonate, and solar
evapo-concentration design processes in Chile, Argentina, and
Bolivia. Mr Bravo, who has reviewed and approved the information
contained in the chapters relevant to his expertise contained in
this announcement, is registered with No. 412 in the public
registry of Competent Persons in Mining Resources and Reserves per
the Law of Persons Competent and its Regulations in force in Chile.
Mr Bravo has sufficient experience relevant to the metallurgical
tests and the type of subsequent processing of the extracted brines
under consideration and to the activity being carried out to
qualify as a competent person, as defined in the JORC Code. Mr
Bravo consents to the inclusion in the press release of the matters
based on his information in the form and context in which it
appears.
The
information communicated within this announcement is deemed to
constitute inside information as stipulated under the Market Abuse
Regulations (EU) No 596/2014 which is part of UK law by virtue of
the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018. Upon publication of this
announcement, this inside information is now considered to be in
the public domain. The person who arranged for the release of this
announcement on behalf of the Company was Gordon Stein, Director
and CFO.
For
further information contact:
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CleanTech Lithium PLC
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Steve Kesler/Gordon Stein/Nick
Baxter
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Jersey office: +44 (0) 1534 668
321
Chile office:
+562-32239222
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Or via Celicourt
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Celicourt Communications
Felicity Winkles/Philip Dennis/Ali
AlQahtani
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+44 (0) 20 7770 6424
cleantech@celicourt.uk
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Beaumont Cornish Limited (Nominated Adviser)
Roland Cornish/Asia
Szusciak
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+44 (0) 20 7628 3396
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Canaccord Genuity (Joint Broker)
James Asensio
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+44 (0) 20 7523 4680
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Fox-Davies Capital Limited (Joint Broker)
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+44 (0) 20 3884 8450
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Daniel Fox-Davies
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daniel@fox-davies.com
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Beaumont Cornish Limited ("Beaumont Cornish") is the Company's
Nominated Adviser and is authorised and regulated by the FCA.
Beaumont Cornish's responsibilities as the Company's Nominated
Adviser, including a responsibility to advise and guide the Company
on its responsibilities under the AIM Rules for Companies and AIM
Rules for Nominated Advisers, are owed solely to the London Stock
Exchange. Beaumont Cornish is not acting for and will not be
responsible to any other persons for providing protections afforded
to customers of Beaumont Cornish nor for advising them in relation
to the proposed arrangements described in this announcement or any
matter referred to in it.
Notes
CleanTech Lithium (AIM:CTL,
Frankfurt:T2N, OTCQX:CTLHF) is an exploration and development
company advancing sustainable lithium projects
in Chile for the clean energy transition. Committed to
net-zero, CleanTech Lithium's mission is to produce material
quantities of sustainable battery grade lithium products using
Direct Lithium Extraction technology powered by renewable energy.
The Company plans to be a leading supplier of 'green' lithium to
the EV and battery manufacturing market.
CleanTech Lithium has two key
lithium projects in Chile, Laguna Verde and Francisco Basin, and
hold licences in Llamara and Salar de Atacama, located in the
lithium triangle, a leading centre for battery grade lithium
production. The two major projects: Laguna Verde and Francisco
Basin are situated within basins controlled by the Company,
which affords significant potential development and operational
advantages. All four projects have direct access to existing
infrastructure and renewable power.
CleanTech Lithium is committed to
using renewable power for processing and reducing the environmental
impact of its lithium production by utilising Direct Lithium
Extraction with reinjection of spent brine. Direct Lithium
Extraction is a transformative technology which removes lithium
from brine, with higher recoveries than conventional extraction
processes. The method offers short development lead times with no
extensive site construction or evaporation pond development so
there is minimal water depletion from the
aquifer. www.ctlithium.com
**ENDS**