Extraction of Vanadium From Vanadium Slag Through a New Technique Route Including Na2O2-Briquetting Roasting Process

The material accumulation during roasting in the practical production causes the hypoxia of the internal materials, leading to the relatively lower vanadium recovery than that in theoretical studies. This work aims to solve the problem of material hypoxia through the Na 2 O 2 -briquetting roasting r...

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Veröffentlicht in:Metallurgical and materials transactions. B, Process metallurgy and materials processing science Process metallurgy and materials processing science, 2022-08, Vol.53 (4), p.2227-2238
Hauptverfasser: Yue, Hong-Rui, Liu, Jian-Xing, Cheng, Gong-Jin, Xue, Xiang-Xin, Zhang, Wei-Jun
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The material accumulation during roasting in the practical production causes the hypoxia of the internal materials, leading to the relatively lower vanadium recovery than that in theoretical studies. This work aims to solve the problem of material hypoxia through the Na 2 O 2 -briquetting roasting route. The vanadium slag and Na 2 O 2 powders were mixed, briquetted, and roasted at various parameters. The generated phases and their distributions were analyzed using X-ray diffraction, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, and electron probe microanalysis. The analyzing results showed that Fe 2 O 3 , Fe 3 O 4 , Mg 0.165 Mn 0.835 O, CaTiO 3 , and Na 3 VO 4 were generated during roasting. The solid–solid reaction between V 2 O 5 and Na 2 O was described using the vacancy-mediated diffusion mechanism. Na + (or V 5+ ), in the Na 2 O (or V 2 O 5 ) layer, jumped and diffused through the Na + (or V 5+ ) vacancies (in the Na 3 VO 4 layer) to the Na 3 VO 4 /V 2 O 5 (or Na 3 VO 4 /Na 2 O) interface. Na + (or V 5+ ) reacted with V 2 O 5 (or Na 2 O) and O 2 decomposed from Na 2 O 2 or transported from the air to generate Na 3 VO 4 . The roasted mixture was leached in an aqueous solution to study the effects of the roasting variables on the vanadium leaching recovery. The vanadium leaching recovery was very sensitive to the roasting variables, it showed very complicated relationships with the Na/V molar ratio, temperature, time, and briquetting pressure. The maximum vanadium leaching recovery of 95.57 pct was achieved when the Na/V molar ratio, temperature, time, and pressure were optimized as 3/1, 850 °C, 2.5 hours, and 5 MPa, respectively. The leaching solution containing vanadium was processed via precipitation and calcination to gather vanadium. The obtained compound was identified as V 2 O 5 with a purity of 96.84 pct, based on the high consistency of diffraction peaks between the present work and that of the joint committee on powder diffraction standards.
ISSN:1073-5615
1543-1916
DOI:10.1007/s11663-022-02522-5