The Contact Process for Sulphuric Acid

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
W. H. De Blois
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
21
File Size:
7225 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1927

Abstract

Introduction In the contact process for ?the manufacture of sulphuric acid, sulphur dioxide gas - produced by the burning of sulphur or of sulphur-bearing ores, or as a by-product in the treatment of sulphide ores - is made to combine with the oxygen of the air to form sulphur trioxide, which then only requires the addition of water to form sulphuric acid. The substance, as for example platinum, causing this combination is usually referred to as a catalyst, a convenient term, in the definition and explanation of which many pages have been written. Catalysis is now a comparatively common means of effecting chemical combination, but if the question were raised here tonight as to what actually goes on when this apparently innocent third party unites the parties of the first and second . part, without itself being altered in any way, I am afraid even our most learned members would have to confess their inability to entirely explain the phenomenon; for although the subject is under investigation, there is still much to learn. The contact process, however, is one of the outstanding achievements in chemical engineering. ? From the standpoint of the difficulties involved and the time absorbed in their solution, it probably stands alone in the field of technical chemistry. In fact, the manufacture of sulphuric acid has, from the earliest days, been surrounded with problems which have interested the ablest chemists. The Chamber System Although this paper has particularly to deal with the contact process, it may not be amiss to refer briefly to the chamber system, which was, and still is, a most important factor in the sulphuric acid industry.
Citation

APA: W. H. De Blois  (1927)  The Contact Process for Sulphuric Acid

MLA: W. H. De Blois The Contact Process for Sulphuric Acid. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1927.

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