Leaching of Iron and Manganese with Ammonium Carbamate

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
I. H. Warren E. A. Devuyst
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
4
File Size:
296 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1973

Abstract

The selective dissolution of pyrolusite (MnO2) in presence of goethite (FeO•OH) in aqueous ammoniacal ammonium carbamate solution has been investigated: various reducing agents were studied, in particular sodium sulfite (Na2SO3,) and hydrazine hydrate (N2H4•H2O). Sodium sulfite was found to be an unsatisfactory reducing agent for both goethite and pyrolusite, for the leaching rate decreased steadily with time to an impractical level because of the limited solubility of the reactions products. Hydrazine hydrate was an effective reducing agent for pyrolusite even at low temperature, whereas goethite required much higher temperatures for any appreciable dissolution. A 1-hr leach at 35°C dissolved 90% of the pyrolusite but only 0.1% of the goethite. An activation energy of 17.0 Kcal per mole was found for the dissolution of pyrolusite with hydrazine. A reaction mechanism for the leaching of pyrolusite with hydrazine is proposed in which a reduction reaction on the surface of the mineral is the rate-determining step. The application of ammonium carbamate to the beneficiation of ilmenite is briefly described.
Citation

APA: I. H. Warren E. A. Devuyst  (1973)  Leaching of Iron and Manganese with Ammonium Carbamate

MLA: I. H. Warren E. A. Devuyst Leaching of Iron and Manganese with Ammonium Carbamate. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1973.

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