The De Wet Process for the Beneficiation Of Zircon: Optimization of the Alkali Fusion Step (5f55065a-3a2e-4d55-ab57-5ca741bbf17b)

International Mineral Processing Congress
Arao Manhique Walter W. Focke Zola Kwela Willem van der Merwe
Organization:
International Mineral Processing Congress
Pages:
8
File Size:
288 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2003

Abstract

"The advantages of the de Wet zirconium process for the manufacture of AZST from zircon sand include: Fewer processing steps; removal of radioactivity by leaching rather than by precipitation; alkali reagent recovery in the form of a sodium silicate solution that is essentially free of radioactivity; fewer waste streams and less waste to discard.Here we report on our efforts at maximizing the alkali recovery in the sodium silicate product stream: Milled zircon, d50 ˜ 9 µm, was fused with caustic soda pearls in open reaction vessels at temperatures between 650°C and 850°C. Fusion times of 1, 2, 4, 24 and 336 hours (with intermittent milling) were investigated.For prolonged fusion times the fusion products approached equilibrium compositions. However, the phases Na2ZrSiO5 and Na4Zr2Si3O12 observed at 850°C did not form at 650°C. Since they do not hydrolyse in water they limit the recovery of alkali. For 2-hour fusions a broad spectrum of non-equilibrium reaction-products, that are rich in sodium silicates, is formed. Optimum process conditions, with respect to NaOH recovery, correspond to a 2:1 stoichiometry and fusing for 2-hour at 850°C. At these conditions the alkali recovery is ca. 78% and the zirconia yield is ca. 57%."
Citation

APA: Arao Manhique Walter W. Focke Zola Kwela Willem van der Merwe  (2003)  The De Wet Process for the Beneficiation Of Zircon: Optimization of the Alkali Fusion Step (5f55065a-3a2e-4d55-ab57-5ca741bbf17b)

MLA: Arao Manhique Walter W. Focke Zola Kwela Willem van der Merwe The De Wet Process for the Beneficiation Of Zircon: Optimization of the Alkali Fusion Step (5f55065a-3a2e-4d55-ab57-5ca741bbf17b). International Mineral Processing Congress, 2003.

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