RI 6100 The Desilication Of Caustic Leach Liquors Containing Alumina ? Summary And Introduction

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
R. V. Lundquist
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
22
File Size:
4634 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1962

Abstract

This report describes results of tests on the desilication of solutions resulting from the leaching of lime-soda sinters. Desilication was accomplished by heating the solutions in an autoclave. A liquor relatively free of silica was obtained after 30 minutes of heating at 200 p.s.i.g. in the presence of lime. The addition of lime improved desilication, but the rate and efficiency of desilication was effected by the quality of lime used. The optimum quantity of lime for effective desilication was about 6 grams per liter. A lesser quantity gave poorer desilication, and a greater quantity increased the alumina loss without improving desilication. The alumina loss was approximately proportional to the lime added. A complex structure, called artificial noselite in this report, was the only silica bearing compound detected in the desilication precipitate. Other compounds present were Ca(OH)2 (calcium hydroxide), CaCO3 (calcium carbonate), and Ca [A1(OH)6]2 (hydrated tricalcium aluminate). Sodium carbonate in the leach liquor retarded the formation of the calcium aluminate; hence it decreased the alumina lost to the precipitate. The extraction of alumina from aluminum silicate materials by the limestone soda-sinter process has been investigated by the Bureau of Mines for many years. The process consists of the following major operations: Blending the aluminum silicate with limestone and soda ash in such proportions that dicalcium silicate and sodium aluminate are formed on sintering; leaching the sinter in a carbonated caustic solution to extract the soluble alumina; purifying the leach liquor by the precipitation of soluble silica (this precipitate is designated desilication precipitate in this paper); precipitating alumina trihydrate from the purified liquors by carbonating with carbon dioxide gas; and calcining the trihydrate to alumina. Commercial grades of
Citation

APA: R. V. Lundquist  (1962)  RI 6100 The Desilication Of Caustic Leach Liquors Containing Alumina ? Summary And Introduction

MLA: R. V. Lundquist RI 6100 The Desilication Of Caustic Leach Liquors Containing Alumina ? Summary And Introduction. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1962.

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