Use of Refractory Hard Cathodes to Reduce the Energy Consumption in Aluminium Smelting

The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Mark P. Taylor Gregory J. Hardie Fiona J. Stevens McFadden William Uru
Organization:
The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Pages:
9
File Size:
1687 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2000

Abstract

"Over 20 million tonnes of installed aluminium smelting capacity exists worldwide, with smelter energy con.sumption in the range 14-17 kWh/kg aluminium. In terms of the reduction cell technology itself, the lowest sustained energy consumption is just below 13DC kWh/kg, or 50% energy efficient.For 15 years Comalco Aluminium Ltd. in Australia has been engaged in developing and testing reduction cells that use a refractory hard cathode, composed of a TiBif carbon composite coating over a carbon cathode. This technology has the potential to reduce energy consumption significantly while simultaneously increasing the life of the cells, which is currently limited by wear rate of the conventional carbon cathodes used throughout the worldIntroductionThe successful development of an aluminium wettable cathode technology affords the opportunity to the cell designer and smelter operator to fundamentally change the physical operating characteristics of the Hall-Heroult process. With this revolutionary capability in hand, published papers and patents have indicated that the technology may be exploited in a wide variety of ways to improve the economic performance of aluminium smelting process. Comalco has been developing refractory hard cathode technology for more than 15 years and has been exploring a number of ways that the technology may be commercially applied in a smelter operation [l]."
Citation

APA: Mark P. Taylor Gregory J. Hardie Fiona J. Stevens McFadden William Uru  (2000)  Use of Refractory Hard Cathodes to Reduce the Energy Consumption in Aluminium Smelting

MLA: Mark P. Taylor Gregory J. Hardie Fiona J. Stevens McFadden William Uru Use of Refractory Hard Cathodes to Reduce the Energy Consumption in Aluminium Smelting. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 2000.

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