RI 7742 Studies On Recovering Rutile From Titanium-Enriched High-Iron Smelter Slag

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Laurance L. Oden
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
13
File Size:
4205 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1973

Abstract

Titanium-enriched smelter slag produced commercially by Quebec Iron and Titanium Corp., Sorel, Quebec, was evaluated as feed material for a process developed by the Bureau of Mines to prepare rutile. Glass-forming agents including P205, B203, and two binary mixtures were added individually to the as-received and preoxidized smelter slag, and the nonferrous tramp oxides were effectively partitioned into the resulting noncrystalline phase. Iron in the ferrous oxidation state was moderately soluble in the glass of reduced specimens but less soluble under oxidizing conditions. The solubility of iron oxide in phosphate glass exceeded the solubility of iron oxide in borate glass. Effective conversion of titanium oxide to rutile was not achieved in the high-iron commercial smelter slag, and 20 to 30 pct of the titanium remained as pseudobrookite, a mixed iron-titanium oxide.
Citation

APA: Laurance L. Oden  (1973)  RI 7742 Studies On Recovering Rutile From Titanium-Enriched High-Iron Smelter Slag

MLA: Laurance L. Oden RI 7742 Studies On Recovering Rutile From Titanium-Enriched High-Iron Smelter Slag. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1973.

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