Hydrometallurgy of Chlorides: A Review of Recent Developments

The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Dirk Verhulst V. I. Lakshmanan
Organization:
The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Pages:
9
File Size:
648 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2011

Abstract

Why Chloride Hydrometallurgy?The most available, cheapest and best known reagent for treating ores and other raw materials for the metallurgical industry is sulfuric acid. Hydrochloric acid is second in line. What often happens is that a process is developed on the basis of sulfuric acid, and that at some point the question arises: wouldn't hydrochloric acid do this better?Considering hydrochloric acid immediately opens a very interesting field of research. To summarize a few comments from another paper presented at this symposium [1]: chlorides are far more soluble than sulfates (with a few interesting exceptions); the hydrogen ion activity is greater in chloride than in comparable sulfate solutions; higher oxidative conditions are possible; regeneration is more straightforward; more diversity is possible and better conditions for the separation of species can be found for solvent extraction and ion exchange; sulfur in the ore can be separated as elemental S; higher metal concentrations in solution and more flexibility in the chosen oxidation state means significantly lower energy costs.Also, the volatility of many chlorides at higher temperature allows further separation without the need to go to a different system. Chlorides also form molten salts with a low melting point, providing another means of separation and purification in the same chloride medium.
Citation

APA: Dirk Verhulst V. I. Lakshmanan  (2011)  Hydrometallurgy of Chlorides: A Review of Recent Developments

MLA: Dirk Verhulst V. I. Lakshmanan Hydrometallurgy of Chlorides: A Review of Recent Developments. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 2011.

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