Recovery Of SO2 From Low Strength Off-Gases

The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
B. Kruger
Organization:
The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
4
File Size:
203 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2004

Abstract

After the milling and flotation of the platinum bearing ore, the flotation concentrate is electrically smelted in 6-in-line electric arc furnaces and the resulting furnace matte treated in Peirce Smith converters to remove the iron. The iron-free (less than 1% Fe) converter matte is granulated and sent to the base metals and precious metals refineries for further processing. During the smelting and converting processes two distinct gas-strength gas streams are produced: ?The Peirce Smith converter off-gas contains 4%?9% SO2which is treated in a conventional sulphuric acid plant to produce 94% H2SO4. ?The electric furnace off-gas contains 0.9% SO2which was (until September 2002) vented through a 91- metre high stack to atmosphere. In October 2002 Impala Platinum commissioned a SULFACID® plant at its smelter in Rustenburg, which recovers the SO2from the electric furnace off-gasses into a weak sulphuric acid solution. The SULFACID® technology utilizes wet activated carbon to oxidize the SO2toSO3. The SO3reacts with the water on the catalyst and is washed off the catalyst bed as a sulphuric acid solution with up to 13 wt. H2SO4. The plant operates at 60ºC and at atmospheric pressure. The SULFACID® technology is widely used in the pigment industry. This is, however, the first application of the technology on electric furnace off-gas. Keywords: SO2, sulphuric acid, electric furnace, off-gas, SULFACID®
Citation

APA: B. Kruger  (2004)  Recovery Of SO2 From Low Strength Off-Gases

MLA: B. Kruger Recovery Of SO2 From Low Strength Off-Gases. The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2004.

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