RI 6728 Recovery Of Manganese From Slag Formed By Selective Oxidation Of High-Manganese Pig Iron

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
E. G. Davis
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
19
File Size:
1101 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1966

Abstract

The Bureau of Mines made laboratory-scale experiments to examine the technical possibilities of reclaiming manganese from slags produced by oxygen lancing of high-manganese pig iron. Ferromanganese was added to molten pig iron to yield a 4-to 5-percent manganese hot metal, which simulated a product obtainable from the blast furnace. This was injected with oxygen to reduce the metal to 1 percent or less manganese and form a slag containing about 40 percent manganese. The molten slag was water-quenched, treated with H2SO4) roasted at 660° C, and water-leached to give soluble manganese and iron sulfates. The sulfates were precipitated as hydroxides, converted to the oxide form, and smelted to produce a standard ferromanganese containing 74.6 percent Mn and 0.01 percent P. As an alternate method of manganese recovery, a manganese cell feed was prepared from the leach solutions and electrolytic manganese was produced. Direct smelting of the high-manganese slag resulted in 74.2 ferromanganese meeting ASTM specifications except for phosphorus content. The high phosphorus content of the metal and high slag-to-metal ratio obtained made this approach unattractive.
Citation

APA: E. G. Davis  (1966)  RI 6728 Recovery Of Manganese From Slag Formed By Selective Oxidation Of High-Manganese Pig Iron

MLA: E. G. Davis RI 6728 Recovery Of Manganese From Slag Formed By Selective Oxidation Of High-Manganese Pig Iron. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1966.

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