Abstract

Calcified roasting followed by dilute sulfuric acid leaching is a promising process for cleaner vanadium extraction from converter vanadium slag. However, some impurities, like Ca, Mg, Mn, Si and Al, also transfer into the leaching solution, accompanying V during the dilute sulfuric acid leaching, leading to the product of vanadium pentoxide prepared from this acidic vanadium-bearing solution, inferior to the product from the traditional process of sodium roasting and water leaching. A chemical precipitation method was firstly proposed to purify this acidic vanadium-bearing solution with a new prepared remover of MnNH4F3, which combines neutralization and fluoride precipitation into one operational step to remove impurities of Ca2+, Mg 2+, Al3+ and Si4+ in an acidic pH range, simultaneously. Effecting factors involved in the purification process were investigated. It was found that removals of Ca, Mg and Al were all over 95% and around 55% of Si was removed as well at stirring speed of 200 rpm, adding coefficient of 1.6, temperature of 50 °C, reaction time of 30 min and pH of 4.50 ± 0.05, while the loss of vanadium was kept lower than 5%, which was attributed to the reason that the purification reactions mainly proceeded on the surface of the remover. Adding flocculant of polyacrylamide was conductive to accelerating sedimentation of the precipitate and reducing the loss of vanadium. Meanwhile, the filter aid of diatomaceous could improve the filtration performance of the slurry. Ammonium persulfate could effectively oxidize and separate Mn2+ in the form of MnO2 from the vanadium-bearing solution which had been treated by MnNH4F3, but performed less selectivity over Mn2+, and the loss of vanadium was unacceptable. The product of vanadium pentoxide prepared from the purified vanadium-containing solution satisfied the requirements for the standard of grade 98.

Highlights

  • Vanadium is widely applied in production of carbon steel, stainless steel, vanadium iron, catalysts and vanadium battery materials due to its high melting-point, high hardness and favorable corrosion resistance at low temperature [1,2]

  • The contents of V2 O5 and other impurity elements contained in the product of vanadium pentoxide powder meet the Chinese standard of YB/T 5304-2017, suggesting that the purification method proposed in this study is feasible for treating the acidic vanadium-bearing solution

  • In the whole purification process of the proposed chemical precipitation, no other ions are introduced into the acidic vanadium-bearing solution, no new impurity elements will appear in the final product of vanadium pentoxide

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Summary

Introduction

Vanadium is widely applied in production of carbon steel, stainless steel, vanadium iron, catalysts and vanadium battery materials due to its high melting-point, high hardness and favorable corrosion resistance at low temperature [1,2]. The chemical precipitation used to purify the acidic vanadium-bearing solution from the cleaner calcified roasting process is the same as the purification method applied in the traditional sodium process in equipment and operation procedures, so additional equipment investment and major changes in the production line are not required if it is industrialized. The purity and chemical composition of vanadium pentoxide prepared from the purified solution were determined to evaluate the feasibility and validity of the proposed purification method It is of significance in providing a new insight on purifying the acidic vanadium-bearing solution and a new motivation for the industrialization of the calcified roasting process of vanadium extraction

Purification Scheme Design
Occurrence of Vanadium in the Vanadium-Bearing Solution
Species of Impurities in the Vanadium-Bearing Solution
Process Route for Purification of the Acidic Vanadium-Bearing Solution
Experimental
Performance of Neutralization Precipitation to Remove Si and Al
Comparison between NH4 F and MnNH4 F3
Effect of Stirring Speed
Effect of Adding Amount of MnNH4 F3
Effect of the pH Value of Solution
Effect of Temperature and Time
Effect of Flocculant and Filter Aid
Mechanism of Purifying the Vanadium-Bearing Solution with MnNH4 F3
Removing Impurity of Mn with Ammonium Persulfate
Effect of Temperature
Effect of pH Value of Solution
Vanadium Precipitation and Thermal Decomposition
Evaluation of the Whole Purification Process
Conclusions
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