RI 8725 Laboratory Studies on the Treatment of Ferric Chloride Stripping Liquor From a Clay-Hydrochloric Acid Leaching Process

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Robert M. Doerr
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
11
File Size:
513 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1982

Abstract

In a process being investigated by the Bureau of Mines for recovering alumina from domestic nonbauxitic resources, calcined kaolinitic clay is leached with hydrochloric acid. Iron impurity in the clay is coleached and is removed in a solvent extraction step prior to crystallization of aluminum chloride hexahydrate, which is subsequently thermally decomposed to alumina. The FeCI3-HCl stripping liquor from the solvent extraction step is unsuitable for discharging to the environment; furthermore, economics requires recovery of the contained chloride values. In the present research, it was shown that the stripping liquor can be reacted with calcined clay to yield AlC13 in solution, plus precipitated iron oxides, residual silica, and unreacted excess clay as mixed solids. For the recovery of the AICl3 solution, the slurry could be separated or returned to the clay-HCI process stream at the solids washing step that follows primary HCI leaching of the clay. For the range 20° to 99° C, the time (t) (103 sec) required to react the waste liquor with excess clay, for essentially complete iron precipitation, depends on the absolute temperature (T) chosen, according to the expression t = e[(9.000/T) -23.5J. (1) Alumina was tried as a reagent alternative to clay but was not very effective, even under pressure and at high temperatures.
Citation

APA: Robert M. Doerr  (1982)  RI 8725 Laboratory Studies on the Treatment of Ferric Chloride Stripping Liquor From a Clay-Hydrochloric Acid Leaching Process

MLA: Robert M. Doerr RI 8725 Laboratory Studies on the Treatment of Ferric Chloride Stripping Liquor From a Clay-Hydrochloric Acid Leaching Process. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1982.

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