Recovery of Harmful Selenium and Arsenic Using Aqueous Processing for Environment Conscious Process

The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Mikio Kobayashi
Organization:
The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Pages:
13
File Size:
298 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1998

Abstract

Extraction of valuable metals from sulfide ores continues to be a very important, process and so the strict control of discharge of harmful metals in effluents from refineries becomes more important in the future. The recovery methods for heavy metals have been developed. Some metals such as Se and As are still difficult to be removed to very low concentration, although the techniques for recovery and removal for many kinds of heavy metals have already been developed. Especially, in case of Se the recovery system from water with low concentration has not be developed yet, although the WHO decided Se to be harmful for human beings and then the discharge control is under obligation now. In general Se exists as selenite ion and/or selenate ion in aqueous phase and selenite ion is able to be recovered by coprecipitation with ferric hydroxide or by reduction to solid selenium by general reductants. Selenate ion, however, has a strong resistance to conventional treatments. Therefore the new technique for the recovery of Se from water including selenate ion has to be developed. In this presentation the new approach for removal of selenate ion using the reaction in which ferrous ion is oxidized to ferric ion is presented. Selenate ion is reduced to selenite ion during the reaction and then to solid selenium, while ferrous ion is oxidized to ferric ion. The coexistence of activated carbon is very useful to increase the reaction rate. The use of iron powder is also effective and very useful for reducing gel-like precipitates mainly consisted of ferric hydroxide. The concentration of the residual selenate ion is probably under 0.1 ppm after recovering Se by the mentioned-above approach. In addition to the mechanisms of these reactions, the effects of pH, coexistent positive and negative ions, and reaction temperature are also presented. Furthermore the investigation of the behavior of selenosulfate is presented.
Citation

APA: Mikio Kobayashi  (1998)  Recovery of Harmful Selenium and Arsenic Using Aqueous Processing for Environment Conscious Process

MLA: Mikio Kobayashi Recovery of Harmful Selenium and Arsenic Using Aqueous Processing for Environment Conscious Process. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 1998.

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