Sulphuric Acid Manufacture

The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
W. G. Davenport M. J. King A. Weissenberger
Organization:
The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
16
File Size:
410 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2006

Abstract

Keywords: Pyrometallurgy, sulphuric acid, sulphur dioxide The raw material for sulphuric acid manufacture is clean SO2 gas. It comes from (i) burning molten by-product sulphur; (ii) roasting or smelting metal sulphide concentrates, and (iii) decomposing contaminated organic chemical process sulphuric acid catalyst. Efficient gas cleaning is required for metallurgical and contaminated acid decomposition gases, especially the former. Sulphuric acid is made from SO2 gas by (i) oxidizing the SO2(g) to SO3(g) in contact with supported liquid-phase catalyst then (ii) reacting the resulting SO3(g) with the water component of 98.5 mass% H2SO4, 1.5 mass% H2O acid. This paper discusses the reasons for these process steps and indicates how acidmaking can be controlled and optimized. Special emphasis is placed on SO2(g) oxidation efficiency and how it is influenced by feed gas composition, feed gas temperature, catalyst composition, catalyst bed pressure, number of catalyst beds, and double versus single contact acidmaking. In addition, a review of various other treatment methods for SO2-bearing gases is provided. A brief description of each process is included along with commentary on their technical and economic applicability for use at metallurgical facilities.
Citation

APA: W. G. Davenport M. J. King A. Weissenberger  (2006)  Sulphuric Acid Manufacture

MLA: W. G. Davenport M. J. King A. Weissenberger Sulphuric Acid Manufacture. The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2006.

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