Areation Catalysts for Upgrading Reduced Ilmenite to Synthetic Rutile

- Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 6
- File Size:
- 707 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1996
Abstract
Laboratory-scale experiments were conducted in a mechanically stirred aeration vessel to determine the rusting abilities of aerated water in the presence of various catalysts compared to the industrially used ammonium chloride. The catalysts used were tartaric acid and citric acid, firstly by themselves, and then in later experiments mixed with ammonium chloride. From these experiments it was found that leaching of iron from reduced ilmenite in the presence of either tartaric acid or its sodium salt was much slower than in the presence of ammonium chloride. Citric acid or its sodium salt also give a slower rate of leaching than the ammonium chloride system, but citric acid and its sodium salt mixed in equal proportions produced a rate of leaching approximately twice as fast as the standard ammonium chloride system. When tartaric acid was mixed with ammonium chloride the leaching rate was found to be equivalent to the leaching rate of the same amount of ammonium chloride alone, thus indicating that tartaric acid made no contribution to the leaching in this svstem_
Citation
APA:
(1996) Areation Catalysts for Upgrading Reduced Ilmenite to Synthetic RutileMLA: Areation Catalysts for Upgrading Reduced Ilmenite to Synthetic Rutile. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1996.