Zinc Oxide from Recycling Processes as a Source for Electrolytic Galvanising

- Organization:
- The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
- Pages:
- 7
- File Size:
- 605 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2008
Abstract
Typical zinc oxides recovered from wastes like steel mill dusts and neutral leaching residues are of a low quality because of impurities like fluorine, chlorine, lead and others. Therefore, they are not comparable to technical grade zinc oxides produced in “French” or “American Process”. Some new developments, most of them still in pilot scale, try to establish processes where higher qualities of the product should be achieved. Zinc oxides are not only supposed to be an input material for electrolytic zinc production. Far more, they should find their way into the zinc oxide market as a substitute for technical grade zinc oxides. Furthermore, a new field of application for these oxides has been investigated at the department of Nonferrous Metallurgy, University of Leoben. Because of a higher acceptance concerning different impurities in relation to zinc winning electrolyses, a use in electrolytic galvanizing shows an interesting option. Therefore, synthetic zinc oxides with different impurities were generated to study the effect of these impurities especially on the quality of the zinc layer. Typical steel sheets, as used for car bodies, were electrolytically galvanized and the resulting layer was analysed, as main impurities compounds of fluorine, chlorine, iron, lead and calcium were used for the investigations. Beside the layer quality, the current efficiency and the possible galvanizing speed were examined. The results give an indication, weather such an alternative application can be feasible from a technical and economical point of view or not. 597
Citation
APA:
(2008) Zinc Oxide from Recycling Processes as a Source for Electrolytic GalvanisingMLA: Zinc Oxide from Recycling Processes as a Source for Electrolytic Galvanising. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 2008.