RI 5983 Chlorination Of Titaniferous Slags: A Study Of The Moving Bed Technique ? Summary

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
E. C. Perkins
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
21
File Size:
4930 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1962

Abstract

As part of a program for developing methods of using domestic titanium deposits, the Bureau of Mines investigated methods for chlorinating titanium slags prepared from titaniferous minerals by electrosmelting. Titaniferous slags were made from ilmenites in the following deposits: Valley County, Idaho; Trail Ridge, Fla.; Aiken, S. C.; and Maclntyre, N. Y.; titaniferous magnetite from Iron Mountain, Wyo., were also evaluated. The tests were made in two chlorinators, a 4-inch and a 36-inch unit. Preliminary testing was done in a 40-millimeter bench-type unit. Chlorine gas was contacted with a loose mixture of titaniferous slag and carbon at a high temperature to form titanium tetrachloride. The moving-bed system used in this work involved a downward movement of feed countercurrent to the chlorine flow, and residues continuously removed from the bottom of the reactor. The performance characteristics of these slags depended on their composition, which varied widely according to the geographic source of the ore. The results showed that all but two of the slags could be chlorinated as effectively as rutile, converting 70 to 80 percent of the titanium to the tetra-, chloride. The two slags that proved difficult were made from New York ilmenite and Wyoming titaniferous magnetite. These slags contained enough magnesium to cause clinkering, which necessitated that the bed be prematurely withdrawn before more than 70 percent of it could react. The iron content of the slags did not interfere with operating the chlorinators. The data from the 4-inch and the 36-inch units were in agreement on the relative amenability of the slags to chlorination.
Citation

APA: E. C. Perkins  (1962)  RI 5983 Chlorination Of Titaniferous Slags: A Study Of The Moving Bed Technique ? Summary

MLA: E. C. Perkins RI 5983 Chlorination Of Titaniferous Slags: A Study Of The Moving Bed Technique ? Summary. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1962.

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