RI 9544 - Ten-Cycle Bench-Scale Study Of Simplified Clay-Hydrogen Chloride Process For Alumina Production

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
D. E. Shanks
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
24
File Size:
1789 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2010

Abstract

This U.S. Bureau of Mines (USBM) research simplified an earlier hydrogen chloride (HCI) leach-sparge process developed by the USBM to recover reduction-grade alumina from domestic kaolin clay. Improvements were made by decreasing the initial leaching acid concentration from 25 to 20 pet, decreasing the leaching time from 1 to 2 h to 15 to 30 min, eliminating the solvent extraction step for Fe removal, and eliminating the step to recover the AI content of the bleedstream circuit. A 10-cycle bench-scale experiment of the simplified process showed that the ferric chloride (FeC13) concentration built up to 9.3 g/L in the recycle stream. This did not interfere with any of the unit operations or final alumina product purity because Fe forms stable soluble chloride complexes when sparged with HCI and is easily washed from the large aluminum chloride hexahydrate (ACH) crystals. The reduced leaching time and acid concentration did not decrease Al extraction.
Citation

APA: D. E. Shanks  (2010)  RI 9544 - Ten-Cycle Bench-Scale Study Of Simplified Clay-Hydrogen Chloride Process For Alumina Production

MLA: D. E. Shanks RI 9544 - Ten-Cycle Bench-Scale Study Of Simplified Clay-Hydrogen Chloride Process For Alumina Production. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 2010.

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