RI 8832 Lime-Gypsum Processing of McDermitt Clay for Lithium Recovery

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 24
- File Size:
- 11061 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1983
Abstract
As part of its efforts to devise new and improved methods for recovering
lithium from unconventional resources , the Bureau of Mines investigated
a lime -gypsum- roast , water- leach technique for processing lithiumenriched
( 0.01-0.68 pct Li ) clays . This report presents the results of
a study of the technical feasibility of extracting lithium from raw
material representative of clay beds associated with the McDermitt Caldera
complex in Nevada and Oregon .
prepared from
water used
Pellets suitable for bench-scale roasting studies were
mixtures of minus 200 -mesh clay , limestone , and gypsum , with
as the pelletizing agent . Roasting pelletized charges at 900 ° to
1,000° C temperatures for 1- to 4-h periods produced calcines that
leached readily , yielding water - soluble lithium sulfate ( Li₂SO4 ) .
A 5-3-3 ( weight ratio ) mix of clay , limestone , and gypsum produced
calcines with the best leaching characteristics . More than 91 pct of
the contained lithium was extracted from pelletized mix batches roasted
in covered refractory boats . Lithium recovery decreased to about 87 pct
when the mix was roasted under dynamic conditions in a gas - fired rotary
furnace . A reaction mechanism was postulated which indicated that dilution
and loss of SO2 and oxygen in the combustion exhaust adversely
affected the leachability of the dynamically roasted calcine .
Citation
APA:
(1983) RI 8832 Lime-Gypsum Processing of McDermitt Clay for Lithium RecoveryMLA: RI 8832 Lime-Gypsum Processing of McDermitt Clay for Lithium Recovery. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1983.