RI 9002 - Producing Chlorination-Grade Feedstock From Domestic Ilmenite-Laboratory and Pilot Plant Studies

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 29
- File Size:
- 15332 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1986
Abstract
The Bureau of Mines investigated the conversion, at both laboratory and pilot plant scale, of a low-grade ilmenite to chlorination-grade feedstock that could substitute for imported rutile used to produce titanium tetrachloride. The concentrate was derived from the Tahawus, NY, lode deposit of ilmenite-magnetite in rock that contains anorthosite and gabbro. Charges of the ilmenite concentrate, containing 46.6 wt pct Ti02 blended with soda ash, were carbothermically reduced in an electric arc furnace, which separated most of the iron and left a high-titanium slag. However, the slag contained Ca, Mg, and Mn constituents that rendered the material unsuitable for continuous chlorination by causing plugging problems. After being ground and pelletized, the slag was reacted with S02 and air at 7000 to 9000 C, which selectively converted the harmful impurities to soluble compounds that were removed in a subsequent water or dilute HCI leach. In laboratory tests, the combined levels of harmful impurities were decreased from 5 to as low as 0.5 wt pct in leached slags. In pilot plant tests, leached slags sulfated at a rate of 10 lb/h averaged 85.5 wt pct Ti02 with pertinent impurity levels averaging 1.86 wt pct. The leached slag was successfully chlorinated in a laboratory fluidized-bed reactor at 9500 C to extract titanium as TiCI4.
Citation
APA:
(1986) RI 9002 - Producing Chlorination-Grade Feedstock From Domestic Ilmenite-Laboratory and Pilot Plant StudiesMLA: RI 9002 - Producing Chlorination-Grade Feedstock From Domestic Ilmenite-Laboratory and Pilot Plant Studies. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1986.