RI 8166 Recovery of Lead From Lead Chloride by Fused-Salt Electrolysis

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
F. P. Haver
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
21
File Size:
1762 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1976

Abstract

The Bureau of Mines has investigated the electrochemical reduction of lead chloride as a method for producing lead without the pollution problems associated with smelting. It was determined that high-purity metal (>99.9 pct Pb) could be obtained, using PbC12 prepared by ferric chloride leaching of galena concentrate: PbS + 2FeCl3?PbCl2 + 2FeC12 + S°. Optimum results in small-scale electrolytic tests were achieved with a bath consisting of 40 to 70 wt-pct PbCl2 dissolved in KC1-LiCl eutectic, an operating temperature of 450° C, a current density of 2.5 amp/in2, and an electrode spacing of 0.5 inch. In large-scale tests made to develop a cell design for commercial application, the optimum electrode arrangement proved to be a bipolar configuration with horizontal plates. This gave a current efficiency of 86 pct with an energy requirement of 0.52 kwhr/lb lead. To determine the effect of impurity buildup in the bath, 1,200 lb of PbC12 prepared by ferric chloride leaching of galena concentrate was electrolyzed over a period of 2 months. Little deterioration of the metal quality occurred in that time; all of the lead produced had a purity equal to or better than corroding grade (>99.94 pct Pb).
Citation

APA: F. P. Haver  (1976)  RI 8166 Recovery of Lead From Lead Chloride by Fused-Salt Electrolysis

MLA: F. P. Haver RI 8166 Recovery of Lead From Lead Chloride by Fused-Salt Electrolysis. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1976.

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