Acid Recovery From Spent Acids & Electrolytes via Continuous Ion Exchange

The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Richard S. Dennis
Organization:
The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Pages:
8
File Size:
320 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1996

Abstract

Acid recovery employs ion exchange (I-X) resin as separation media for inorganic acids from dissolved metallic salts by physical adsorption and without the use of chemicals. This technology has been used for years on spent etching and plating liquors to recover acid for reuse in the bath and to reduce waste acid neutralization costs. It is also used for electrolyte treatment to facilitate valuable metal recovery via acidity reduction. TETRA's ccrxr'" I-X contactor has been used successfully for acid separation from its metallic salt counterpart in a simple, continuous operating mode using strong base anion resins. Efficient separation is enhanced by acid reconcentration to nearly its original strength or as high as 14-20%. Continuous treatment also recovers heat to the tankhouse or bath and improves metal quality due to consistent acid quality. Conventional fixed bed ion exchange (I-X) systems are impractical for acid recovery because of complex control design and large resin inventories needed to process very low liquid-to-resin treatment ratios associated with strong acid concentrations.
Citation

APA: Richard S. Dennis  (1996)  Acid Recovery From Spent Acids & Electrolytes via Continuous Ion Exchange

MLA: Richard S. Dennis Acid Recovery From Spent Acids & Electrolytes via Continuous Ion Exchange. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 1996.

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