At a glance
- Researchers found a way to recover silver from electronic waste using vegetable oil and hydrogen peroxide.
- The method avoids harsh chemicals, making silver recycling cleaner and safer for the environment.
- This breakthrough could help reclaim valuable metals from old phones, circuit boards, and other devices.
- Cleaner e-waste recycling may reduce mining needs and keep critical materials in use longer.
What if your old bottle of cooking oil could help save the planet and your smartphone? That’s the big idea behind a groundbreaking discovery from researchers in Finland. Scientists from the University of Helsinki and the University of Jyväskylä have found that you can recover silver from electronic waste using common kitchen ingredients like vegetable oil and hydrogen peroxide. This sustainable, scalable method, published in the Chemical Engineering Journal, could change how we mine precious metals from our growing piles of electronic junk.

Credit: Chemical Engineering Journal
How cooking oil recovers silver from electronic waste
Here’s how it works. Fatty acids found in oils like sunflower or olive oil are mixed with hydrogen peroxide. When heated slightly, this combo safely dissolves silver from old circuit boards, wires, or keyboard connectors. Then, using ethyl acetate (a far less toxic alternative to industrial solvents), researchers pull out the silver in a solid form. Unlike traditional methods that rely on harsh acids or cyanide-based solutions, this technique avoids toxic runoff and air pollution. Think of it as salad dressing meets science lab, without the environmental mess.
Why recycling silver from e-waste is urgently needed
Silver powers the devices you use every day, such as phones, solar panels, electric vehicles, and even medical tech. But less than 20% of it gets recycled. As demand rises and natural resources shrink, finding clean ways to reclaim silver isn’t just smart. It’s necessary. Silver prices have surged sixfold in the last 25 years. At the same time, supply has lagged. That makes e-waste a goldmine, literally, for anyone who can unlock its hidden metals without poisoning the environment.

Credit: Chemical Engineering Journal
How scientists extract silver using fatty acids and light
To figure out exactly how this all works, researchers used advanced computer models to study how fatty acids interact with silver ions. The process not only stabilizes the silver but also allows for easy recovery using light and simple solvents. Better still, the ingredients can be reused, no chemical waste, and there is no massive cost. And it’s highly selective. The method targets silver while leaving other metals behind, a major step forward in urban mining. In testing, even silver-coated keyboard connectors were cleanly processed into pure elemental silver powder using this system.

Credit: Chemical Engineering Journal
What this means for you
This research brings us closer to safe, at-home or small-scale recycling kits that could recover silver from old gadgets. Recyclers and manufacturers could adopt this method to reduce chemical waste and operating costs, while protecting workers and the environment. This method supports a future where nothing goes to waste. It keeps valuable materials in use, cutting down the need for mining and pollution. Silver is vital to do many of the tech items we use everyday. Reusing it responsibly means cleaner energy at a lower cost and less reliance on mined resources.
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- How to securely get rid of your old PC or Mac
- How to securely get rid of your old cell phone
Kurt’s key takeaways
We’ve long known that waste is a problem. Now, it might also be the solution. By turning everyday ingredients into powerful recycling tools, scientists are showing us what’s possible when chemistry and sustainability meet. The process is still being refined, but the promise is clear: a greener future where reclaiming valuable metals doesn’t cost the earth, or our health.
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If you could extract silver from your old gadgets with tools in your kitchen, would you do it? Or should this be left to the pros? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below.
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19 comments
I am very interested in the process of extracting silver from my old phones, computer, computers, etc. Can you give us the exact process to begin this journey?
Kurt, I think there should be a program for selling your devices for maybe the amount of silver they can get out of it.
If there was a home method to do this I would certainly do it. This should be proposed to local and city officials to do this as they could use the revenue for the sale of the silver to reduce taxes.
This is great! I would definitely have fun recycling my own gadgets… a little project!
Absolutely yes, I would extract silver from old electronics in my home if I had the proper formula for doing so.
If it is as easy as you say and the silver I could extract could provide a nice $$ reward, I would be interested.
Leave the re-cycling to the pros. Just tell me where I can take the bin of discarded electronics currently taking up space in my home! lol
Hi William, check out our articles on this topic here:
How to securely get rid of your old PC or Mac
How to securely get rid of your old cell phone
What a fonomanal break through for recycling silver! My hats off to the Scientific Engineeres of Finland!
Yes I would consider recycling silver at home, especially if I could sell it ones it’s extracted. I think having this kind of technology at home would invite every scrap metal collector, high school kid, work from home moms & dads to help subsidizes their home income. Recycling factories could slow down & we could save billions on overhead & pollution! This discovery is well needed & could benifit beyond our imaginations.
Having worked in the chemical industry for nearly 30 years one of the key ingredients in photographic film was, and is, silver.
Now, thinking about old outdated black & white film as well as old B&W negatives, might this process be applied to that medium?
How much silver is in an average cell phone??
How many would you have to do at a time to make it worth while??
im game tell us how
For sure would extract the silver
Yes- I would do it at home! Will it work on all circuit boards … computers, printers, cell phones, TV’s, camcorders, VCR’s …?
I am a retired Medical Technologist and would love to have a way to do this at home, have always loved the chemistry side of my job.
I love science; although I readily admit that Physics is my passion, much more so than Chemistry. So, while I certainly appreciate this exciting breakthrough on extracting the silver from electronic devices I would say we probably ought to pump the brakes just a little! Discoveries like this do tend to take time before the scientific community even figures out just how to do this in a cost efficient method; let alone a private individual who wants to (inadvertently) try their hand at burning down their, or their parents, house!😂
Until such time as the actual scientists have this process down to a “science” that allows everyone to do this in their own home (I’m going to go out on a limb here and say…. perhaps not in our lifetimes) this sounds like a lot of homes burning to the ground while someone is trying to play mad scientist! I think I’ll pass, and hope the individual living on either side of me does as well!!!
Absolutely!
I’ve got old phones. What is the best way to get them safely recycled?
Hi Frank, see our article here about this topic.