Kinetics of thermal decomposition of hydrated minerals associated with hematite ore in a fluidized bed reactor

P. C. Beuria , S. K. Biswal , B. K. Mishra , G. G. Roy

International Journal of Minerals, Metallurgy, and Materials ›› 2017, Vol. 24 ›› Issue (3) : 229 -239.

PDF
International Journal of Minerals, Metallurgy, and Materials ›› 2017, Vol. 24 ›› Issue (3) : 229 -239. DOI: 10.1007/s12613-017-1400-y
Article

Kinetics of thermal decomposition of hydrated minerals associated with hematite ore in a fluidized bed reactor

Author information +
History +
PDF

Abstract

The kinetics of removal of loss on ignition (LOI) by thermal decomposition of hydrated minerals present in natural iron ores (i.e., kaolinite, gibbsite, and goethite) was investigated in a laboratory-scale vertical fluidized bed reactor (FBR) using isothermal methods of kinetic analysis. Experiments in the FBR in batch processes were carried out at different temperatures (300 to 1200°C) and residence time (1 to 30 min) for four different iron ore samples with various LOIs (2.34wt% to 9.83wt%). The operating velocity was maintained in the range from 1.2 to 1.4 times the minimum fluidization velocity (U mf). We observed that, below a certain critical temperature, the FBR did not effectively reduce the LOI to a desired level even with increased residence time. The results of this study indicate that the LOI level could be reduced by 90% within 1 min of residence time at 1100°C. The kinetics for low-LOI samples (<6wt%) indicates two different reaction mechanisms in two temperature regimes. At lower temperatures (300 to 700°C), the kinetics is characterized by a lower activation energy (diffusion-controlled physical moisture removal), followed by a higher activation energy (chemically controlled removal of LOI). In the case of high-LOI samples, three different kinetics mechanisms prevail at different temperature regimes. At temperature up to 450°C, diffusion kinetics prevails (removal of physical moisture); at temperature from 450 to 650°C, chemical kinetics dominates during removal of matrix moisture. At temperatures greater than 650°C, nucleation and growth begins to influence the rate of removal of LOI.

Keywords

thermal decomposition / fluidized beds / kinetic analysis / hydrated iron ore / activation energy

Cite this article

Download citation ▾
P. C. Beuria, S. K. Biswal, B. K. Mishra, G. G. Roy. Kinetics of thermal decomposition of hydrated minerals associated with hematite ore in a fluidized bed reactor. International Journal of Minerals, Metallurgy, and Materials, 2017, 24(3): 229-239 DOI:10.1007/s12613-017-1400-y

登录浏览全文

4963

注册一个新账户 忘记密码

References

[1]

Das S.K., Das B., Saktivel R., Mishra B.K. Mineralogy, microstructure, and chemical compositions of goethites in some iron ore deposits of Orissa, India. Miner. Process. Extr. Metall. Rev., 2010, 31(2): 97.

[2]

Mishra B.K., Das B., Prakash S., Das S.K., Biswal S. K., Reddy P.S.R. Issues relating characterization and beneficiation of low grade iron ore. Steelworld, 2007 34.

[3]

Biswal S.K. Utilization of low grade iron ore fines, slimes and tailings by physical beneficiation to minimize the waste generation. J.^Sustainable Planet, 2010, 1, 46.

[4]

Chung U.C., Lee I.O., Kim H.G., Sahajwalla V., Chung W.B. Degradation characteristics of iron ore fines of a wide size distribution in fluidized-bed reduction. ISJI Int., 1998, 38(9): 943.

[5]

Sundarmurti N.S., Rao V. Thermal conductivity and diffusivity of iron ore pellet having low porosity. ISJI Int., 2002, 42(7): 800.

[6]

Santos L.D., Brandao P.R.G. Morphological varieties of goethite in iron ore from Minas Gerais, Brazil. Miner. Eng., 2003, 16(11): 1285.

[7]

Singh R.K., Roy G.K. Prediction of minimum bubbling velocity, fluidization index and range of particulate fluidization for gas–solid fluidization in cylindrical and non-cylindrical beds. Powder Technol., 2005, 159(3): 168.

[8]

Gialanella S., Girardi F., Ischia G., Lonardelli I., Mattarelli M., Montagna M. On the goethite to hematite phase transformation. J.^Therm. Anal. Calorim., 2010, 102(3): 867.

[9]

Inoue M., Kitamura K., Tanino H., Nakayama H., Inui T. Alcohothermal treatments of gibbsite: mechanism for the transformation of boehmite. Clays Clay Miner., 1989, 37, 71.

[10]

Bamford C.H., Tipper C.F.H. Comprehensive Chemical Kinetics, 1980, New York, Elsevier Scientific Publishing Corporation, Amsterdam

[11]

Halikia I., Zoumpoulakis L., Christodoulou E., Prattis D. Kinetic study of the thermal decomposition of calcium carbonate by isothermal method of analysis. Eur. J.^Miner. Process. Environ. Prot., 2001, 1(2): 1303.

[12]

Halikia I., Neou-Syngouna P., Kolitsa D. Isothermal kinetic analysis of the thermal decomposition of magnesium hydroxide using thermo gravimetric data. Thermochim. Acta, 1998, 320(1-2): 75.

[13]

Goss C.J. The kinetics and reaction mechanism of the goethite to hematite transformation. Mineral. Mag., 1987, 51, 437.

[14]

Wolska E. Relation between the existence of hydroxyl ions in the anionic substance of hematite and its infrared and X-ray characteristics. Solid State Ionics, 1988, 28-30, 1349.

[15]

Özdemir Dunlop D.J. Intermediate magnetite formation during dehydration of goethite. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett., 2000, 177(1-2): 59.

[16]

Przepiera K., Przepiera A. Kinetic of thermal transformations of precipitated magnetite and goethite. J.^Therm. Anal. Calorim., 2001, 65(2): 497.

[17]

Lima-De-Faria J. Dehydration of goethite and diaspore. Z.^Kristallogr., 1963, 119(1-6): 176.

[18]

Prasad P.S.R., Prasad K.S., Chaitanya V.K., Babu E.V.S.S.K., Sreedhar B., Murthy S.R. In situ FTIR study on the dehydration of natural goethite. J.^Asian Earth Sci., 2006, 27(4): 503.

AI Summary AI Mindmap
PDF

127

Accesses

0

Citation

Detail

Sections
Recommended

AI思维导图

/