RI 5381 Removing And Recovering Fluorine From Western Phosphate Rock And Utilizing The Defluorinated Rock ? Summary

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Milton B. Hall
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
54
File Size:
24682 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1958

Abstract

This report discusses in detail laboratory and pilot-plant tests conducted from January 1951 until January 1955 at the Northwest Electrodevelopment Experiment Station of the Bureau of Mines, Albany, Oreg., on defluorination and recovery of evolved fluorine from phosphate rock. Results of use tests of defluorinated phosphate rock by cooperating agricultural colleges and the United States Department of Agriculture are also included. In 1954 the consumption of fluorspar, the only domestic fluorine-bearing mineral of commercial importance, was approximately 478,000 short tons; 245,000 tons was from domestic mines. The production of marketable phosphate rock in the same period was about 13,800,000 long tons. Of this total amount, approximately 15 percent was produced in the West. From the viewpoint of conservation and utilization of fluorine as a natural resource, it is interesting to note that the total estimated quantity of fluorine in domestically produced phosphate rock is more than double that present in domestically mined fluorspar.
Citation

APA: Milton B. Hall  (1958)  RI 5381 Removing And Recovering Fluorine From Western Phosphate Rock And Utilizing The Defluorinated Rock ? Summary

MLA: Milton B. Hall RI 5381 Removing And Recovering Fluorine From Western Phosphate Rock And Utilizing The Defluorinated Rock ? Summary. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1958.

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