RI 4299 Extraction Of Alumina From High-Iron Bauxites - Pilot-Plant Tests Employing The Lime-Soda Sinter Process

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Frank J. Cservenyak
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
35
File Size:
11219 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1948

Abstract

Curtailment of bauxite importation by enemy activities during World War II focused attention on the necessity of developing domestic deposits of aluminous materials. Large quantities of aluminum ores such as kaolin, siliceous bauxites, high-iron bauxites, anorthosite, and diaspore clays are available but not readily amenable to Bayer processing because of excessive impurities. The Bayer process, which is the only commercial method in use in the United States for producing metallurgical-grade alumina, requires a high Al2O3 bauxite relatively low in SiO2 and Fe2O3. The Bureau of Mines was charged by Congress to investigate processes for the production of alumina from these low-grade ores. One part of the program was an investigation, in the laboratory and pilot plant, of the recovery of alumina by the lime-soda sinter process. Ores comprising kaolin, diasporic clays, anorthosite, and siliceous bauxites have been investigated and studied in the laboratory and pilot plant, and a series 'of reports covering these investigations has been prepared.
Citation

APA: Frank J. Cservenyak  (1948)  RI 4299 Extraction Of Alumina From High-Iron Bauxites - Pilot-Plant Tests Employing The Lime-Soda Sinter Process

MLA: Frank J. Cservenyak RI 4299 Extraction Of Alumina From High-Iron Bauxites - Pilot-Plant Tests Employing The Lime-Soda Sinter Process. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1948.

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