Experimental work has been performed to investigate the precipitation mechanism of aluminum hydroxide phases from sodium aluminate/sodium carbonate pregnant solutions by carbon dioxide gas purging. Such solutions result from leaching calcium aluminate slags with sodium carbonate solutions, in accordance with the Pedersen process, which is an alternative process for alumina production. The concentration of carbonate ions in the pregnant solution is revealed as a key factor in controlling the nature of the precipitating phase. Synthetic aluminate solutions of varying sodium carbonate concentrations, ranging from 20 to 160 g/L, were carbonated, and the resulting precipitating phases were characterized by X-ray diffraction analysis. Based on the results of the previous carbonation tests, a series of experiments were performed in which the duration of carbonation and the aging period of the precipitates varied. For this work, a synthetic aluminate solution containing 20 g/L free Na2CO3 was used. The precipitates were characterized with X-ray diffraction analysis and Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy.
Leaching experiments were performed in calcium aluminate slag with a high-sodium carbonate adaptation of the Pedersen process. A theoretical thermodynamic study of the pregnant leaching solution was conducted to specify the thermodynamically favored species that exist within. Using the HSC 9.0 software, a carbonation process simulation (neutralization of the aluminate solution with CO2 gas) was simulated. Laboratory carbonation experiments were conducted to verify the theoretical predictions. According to the thermodynamic study, at temperatures below 50 °C gibbsite precipitates in the first stages of carbonation and then is transformed to dawsonite. Temperatures over 65 °C favor the direct precipitation of dawsonite. The same route (thermodynamic analysis, carbonation simulation, and experimental verification) was followed by a synthetic solution containing lower amount of sodium carbonate to prove that dawsonite precipitation occurred as a result of the high free carbonate content, to investigate the effect of temperature and to precipitate alumina hydrate phases.
Graphical Abstract
Engineering geological thematic maps can provide substantial information for the development of cities, the land planning of future infrastructures and even more for the planning of the natural hazards prevention and/or mitigation. To this direction the engineering geological map of the Municipality of Pallini
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