학술논문

Leaching of niobium- and REE-bearing iron ores: Significant reduction of H2SO4 consumption using SO2 and activated carbon
Document Type
article
Source
Subject
Chemical Engineering
Analytical Chemistry
Language
Abstract
An innovative process was developed for the leaching of niobium- and rare earth elements-bearing pyrochlores ores and the subsequent separation of Nb from the REE. Compared to the conventional Nb hydrometallurgical methods, the proposed leaching process is based on a triphasic system: H2SO4(aq)-SO2(g)-activated carbon/ore. The implementation of this leaching step allows the selective dissolution of the non-valuable phases while significantly reducing the H2SO4 consumption. The results obtained in continuous operation, at the pilot scale, show a reduction of the sulfur consumption by 48% when compared to the classical H2SO4 pasting-roasting process. The presence of activated carbon, at concentration as low as 0.4% (w/w), was found to considerably fasten the dissolution reactions and allows optimizing the SO2 utilization to a nearly quantitative rate. The triphasic leaching also affords concentrating the Nb stream which decreases the energy consumption of the down-stream operations and especially for the subsequent Nb-REE-bearing pyrochlores roasting step. The process was optimized at the laboratory scale and then tested in continuous operation for 15 days at a flow of 15 kg h−1 of dry equivalent of non-magnetic Nb-REE pyrochlore ore from the Gabonese Mabounié deposit and the equivalent of 8.25 kg h−1 of H2SO4 and 0.15 kg h−1 of activated carbon.