Litcius/Paper detail

Investigation of Vanadium-Containing Sludge Oxidation Roasting Process for Vanadium Extraction

U. А. Kologrieva, А. И. Волков, Dmitry Zinoveev, I. A. Krasnyanskaya, Pavel Stulov, Dmitry Wainstein

2021Metals25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Vanadium containing sludge is a by-product of vanadium pentoxide obtained by hydrometallurgical methods from vanadium slag that can be estimated as a promising technogeneous raw material for vanadium production. The phase analysis of vanadium-containing sludge by the X-ray diffraction method showed that it contains vanadium in spinel form (FeO∙V2O3). The various oxidation roasting methods for sludge treatment were studied for increasing vanadium extraction into the solution. It showed that the most effective additive is 1% CaCO3 at a roasting temperature of 1000 °C. Oxidation roasting of vanadium-containing sludge with the additive led to an increase in the acid-soluble form of V2O5 from 1.5% to 3.7% and a decrease in the content of FeO∙V2O3 from 3% to 0.4%. These results confirm the efficiency of the application of oxidation roasting to convert vanadium compounds into acid-soluble forms. The conversion mechanism of spinel to acid-soluble phases during oxidation roasting with additives was investigated by thermogravimetric analysis and thermodynamic simulation. It showed that the formation of acid-soluble calcium vanadates during oxidation roasting without additives occurs at temperatures above 800 °C while CaCO3 addition allows one to reduce this temperature to 600 °C.

Topics & Concepts

VanadiumRoastingSpinelExtraction (chemistry)ChemistryPentoxideInorganic chemistryRaw materialThermogravimetric analysisMaterials scienceMetallurgyNuclear chemistryChromatographyOrganic chemistryMetal Extraction and BioleachingRadioactive element chemistry and processingExtraction and Separation Processes