Technical Papers and Discussions - Aluminum - The Ammonium Sulphate Process for the Extraction of Alumina from Clay and Its Application in a Plant at Salem, Oregon (Metals Tech., December 1948, TP 2473)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
W. R. Seyfried
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
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12
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581 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1949

Abstract

The problem of extracting alumina from clay and low-grade bauxites has been the subject of considerable interest for some time. The basic reason, of course, lies in the fact that known reserves of high-grade bauxite are not inexhaustible and that the present commercial process cannot successfully cope with low-grade bauxites or clay. Ultimately it may be necessary to use these poorer raw materials for all commercial operations. An unprecedented demand for aluminum during the war emergency and the constantly threatened shortage of imported bauxite caused the United States Government to take an active role in this problem. Through the National Academy of Sciences, the War Production Board and the Defense Plant Corporation, it investigated processes and finally selected four to be used in the construction and operation of four experimental plants. Each plant was to be designed in such a way as to facilitate its incorporation into a larger commercial plant should the need arise. The Chemical Construction Corporation process, or "Chemico" ammonium sulphate process as it is better known, was one of the four selected. The extensive literature and patents on record before the war generally follow one of two process-types depending upon the extracting reagent used. One group uses an acid reagent, the other an alkali. The Chemico process uses an acid reagent. For those interested in other processes described in literature, there is a short bibliography at the end of this paper. The basic steps of all acid extraction processes are: (I) to make the aluminum silicates acid soluble, (2) to separate the released alumina from impurities and insoluble gangue, and (3) to recover the reagent for re-use. The Process as Planned In April 1941, a group of chemists and engineers of the Chemical Construction Corp. became interested in the problem of extracting alumina from clays and low-grade bauxites and, under the leadership of Mr. Blakeslee Barnes, Vice President and General Manager of the company, first drafted a process in July of that year—five months prior to Pearl Harbor. The work continued in our research laboratories and with a small pilot plant. By June 1943, the work had progressed to a point where it was possible to apply for a patent on the process which was U.S. patent 2,405,426, granted August 6, 1946. Immediately prior to the development of the Salem plant, the process was envisaged to be as follows: I. The first step was to make the aluminum silicates acid soluble. It was planned: (a) Clay or lour-grade bauxite would be roasted at 700 to 800°C (1292° to 1472°F). (b) The roasted ore would then be leached with hot aqueous ammonium bi-sulphate to form a slurry. In this way the
Citation

APA: W. R. Seyfried  (1949)  Technical Papers and Discussions - Aluminum - The Ammonium Sulphate Process for the Extraction of Alumina from Clay and Its Application in a Plant at Salem, Oregon (Metals Tech., December 1948, TP 2473)

MLA: W. R. Seyfried Technical Papers and Discussions - Aluminum - The Ammonium Sulphate Process for the Extraction of Alumina from Clay and Its Application in a Plant at Salem, Oregon (Metals Tech., December 1948, TP 2473). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1949.

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