RI 5042 Investigation Of Low-Grade Bauxites As Potential Sources Of Aluminum By Caustic Desilication And Alumina Extraction ? Introduction And Summary

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
W. A. Calhoun
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
30
File Size:
2610 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1954

Abstract

This investigation of low-grade bauxites as potential sources of aluminum by caustic desilication and alumina extraction was undertaken by the Bureau of Mines to develop extractive methods for winning alumina from domestic deposits of low-grade bauxites. This report is the second of a series covering the work by the Bureau of Mines' Rolla, Mo., and Bauxite, Ark., laboratories. The first report published in the Journal of Metals, December 1951,3/ and dealt with kaolin and halloysite. The present investigation is concerned with low-grade bauxites only. The purpose of these investigations is to increase the domestic supply of aluminum ores. With eventual depletion of high-grade deposits, aluminous materials, such as low-grade bauxite, clays, shales, and high-iron laterites, will become our principal domestic sources of aluminum. The development of extractive processes for winning alumina from these low-grade materials is one of the many national security measures undertaken by the Bureau of Mines. A method has-been developed in the laboratory for successfully treating high-silica bauxites from domestic deposits. In this process the bauxite was calcined at 980° C. to form amorphous silica and alumina. The calcine was then leached by percolation with 15-percent sodium hydroxide solution at 940 to 96° C., removing 67 to 77 percent of the silica with a loss of 4.1 to 5.0 percent of the alumina. The sodium hydroxide in the spent liquor used in desilication was 95 percent recoverable, and comparable desilication results were obtained with 100-percent reclaimed liquor, The indicated cost of reagents, for sodium hydroxide and lime used in the desilication and regenera¬tion of spent liquor, was about $4.00 per ton of calcine treated.
Citation

APA: W. A. Calhoun  (1954)  RI 5042 Investigation Of Low-Grade Bauxites As Potential Sources Of Aluminum By Caustic Desilication And Alumina Extraction ? Introduction And Summary

MLA: W. A. Calhoun RI 5042 Investigation Of Low-Grade Bauxites As Potential Sources Of Aluminum By Caustic Desilication And Alumina Extraction ? Introduction And Summary. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1954.

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