The behaviour of individual species in the carbochlorination of titaniferous oxides

- Organization:
- The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 14
- File Size:
- 754 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2003
Abstract
Tests were conducted on samples of rutile, titaniferous slag and ilmenite; each sample was mixed with coke and chlorinated in a bubbling fluidized bed at 1000°C. Profiles of the rates of chlorination of species were constructed from chemical compositions of the bed residues at different durations. From the start FeO and MnO are chlorinated quickly and all but entirely in a fraction of the time it takes to chlorinate all the TiO2. When the level of FeO is significant, as in slag and ilmenite, FeO is chlorinated faster than TiO2is. In these oxides, there is an inverse relationship between the rates of chlorination of FeO and TiO2during this first stage; the relationship, moreover, correlates linearly with the initial percentage of FeO in the oxide. We identify three stages in the chlorination process; a first, in slag and ilmenite, when FeO is being chlorinated; a second, when TiO2is most readily chlorinated; and a third, towards the end, when the levels of TiO2are reduced to those of other species. The rates at which individual species are chlorinated are analysed in terms of their appreciation or depreciation with respect toTiO2
Citation
APA:
(2003) The behaviour of individual species in the carbochlorination of titaniferous oxidesMLA: The behaviour of individual species in the carbochlorination of titaniferous oxides. The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2003.