Abstract

Phosphogypsum is the byproduct discharged from phosphate industry. A novel process was proposed for converting phosphogypsum into ammonium sulfate via phosphogypsum carbonation with ammonia. The effects of stirring speed, reaction time, initial temperature, CO2 partial pressure, liquid–solid ratio and excess ammonia ratio were evaluated. The main phases presented before and after the carbonation process were identified using X-ray fluorescence (XRF), X-ray diffraction (XRD), scanning electron microscopy with energy dispersive X-ray (SEM-EDX) and carbon-sulfur (CS) analytical techniques. The phosphogypsum was found to have the highest carbonation conversion of approximately 97% in 5min. The product collected from the reaction was characterized as calcite with the average particle size smaller than the raw phosphogypsum.

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