New Developments In The Altair Hydrochloride TIO2 pigment Process

- Organization:
- The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
- Pages:
- 11
- File Size:
- 1505 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2003
Abstract
The Altair process employs digestion of ilmenite ore in concentrated hydrochloric acid, solvent extraction to concentrate Ti in a purified stream and spray hydrolysis to produce a TiO2 hydrate, followed by final calcining and milling. HCl gas is regenerated by pressure-swing distillation and reinjected in the leaching solution. All chloride streams are recycled. Chromium compounds generally remain in the residue. Solvent extraction provides flexibility for the removal of naturally occurring radioactive elements (NORMs) present in some ilmenites. The process was previously tested at a 5 t/day feed scale. Recent work at pilot scale (40 liter reactor) led to further improvements. Recovery of Ti in solution is now at least 90% with ilmenite ores, while crystallization at lower temperature lowers the amount of Fe in solution to about 5 g/l and improves solvent extraction, which is now conducted in columns. Higher Ti and lower Fe concentrations in the SX eluate improve the economics. A new formula for pigment production via spray hydrolysis produces a pigmentary base with a narrow particle size distribution.
Citation
APA:
(2003) New Developments In The Altair Hydrochloride TIO2 pigment ProcessMLA: New Developments In The Altair Hydrochloride TIO2 pigment Process. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 2003.