Basic Principles Of Environmentally Sound Electrochemical Technology For Processing Sintered Carbide Scrap For Hard-Alloy Industry

The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
A. V. Tarasov
Organization:
The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Pages:
7
File Size:
119 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2006

Abstract

Regeneration of carbide waste from hard-alloy (sintered carbide) manufacture is an important scientific and technical objective aimed at improving the degree of recycling of rare metals (W, Co, Ta, Ti, Nb). Currently, the degree of recycling of those metals does not exceed 25% to 35% of their total production even in industrially developed countries. This is attributed to a significant extent to the substantial drawbacks of the technologies applied for their processing (environmental pollution, limitations to the use of regenerated products for important applications, sophisticated equipment to be used). An innovative environmentally sound technology has been developed in the Institute of Metallurgy of the Russian Academy of Sciences (IMET RAN) for processing of carbide waste of WC, TiC, TTC and other carbides using asymmetric alternating current of industrial frequency (the electrolyte used for this purpose is nitric acid solution). The current efficiency under optimal conditions is as high as 96% to 98%. The process has been tested on bench scale. The following commercial-grade products are obtained: pure ammonium paratungstate, tungstic acid, cobalt oxide, titanium dioxide and tantalum-niobium concentrate. The total metals recovery is 98% to 99%.
Citation

APA: A. V. Tarasov  (2006)  Basic Principles Of Environmentally Sound Electrochemical Technology For Processing Sintered Carbide Scrap For Hard-Alloy Industry

MLA: A. V. Tarasov Basic Principles Of Environmentally Sound Electrochemical Technology For Processing Sintered Carbide Scrap For Hard-Alloy Industry. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 2006.

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