Abstract
Phosphorite, or phosphate rock, is the raw material of phosphoric acid production. It has also been regarded as the most important secondary rare earth element (REE) resource due to low contents of rare earth elements contained in the ore. In Florida, there is about 19 Mt of phosphate rock mined annually. After beneficiation, the phosphate rock concentrate is utilized to produce phosphoric acid via a wet-process in which sulfuric acid is used to digest phosphate. During these processes, REEs and some phosphorus get lost in the byproducts including phosphatic clay, flotation tailings, phosphogypsum (PG), and phosphoric sludge. Recovering REEs and phosphorus from these wastes is beneficial to maximize the utilization of these valuable resources. This study focused on the effects of wet-process operating conditions on REE and phosphorus leaching from a kind of flotation tailing of Florida phosphate rock. The tailings were first beneficiated with a shaking table, and then a series of leaching tests were conducted on the shaking table concentrate. The results indicated that REEs had similar trends of leaching efficiency to those of phosphorus. Under the conditions of 16% phosphoric acid concentration in the initial pulp, a temperature of 75 °C, a stoichiometric ratio of sulfuric acid (H2SO4) to calcium oxide (CaO) of 1.1, and a weight ratio of liquid to solid of 3.5, REE and phosphorus leaching efficiencies reached relatively high values of approximately 61% and 91%, respectively. Analyses indicated that the phosphate ions (PO43−) in the leaching solution tended to combine with REE ions to form REE phosphates which precipitated into PG, but the other large amount of anions such as sulfate ions (SO42−) and fluoride ions (F−) took effect of steric hindrance to prevent PO43− from combining with REE cations. These two opposite effects determined the REE distribution between the leaching solution and PG.
Highlights
Phosphorite, or phosphate rock, is a kind of igneous or sedimentary rock in which a high amount of phosphate presents as fluorapatite (Ca5 (PO4 )3 F), or as hydroxystalline (Ca5 (PO4 )3 OH)
Analyses indicated that the phosphate ions (PO4 3− ) in the leaching solution tended to combine with rare earth element (REE) ions to form REE phosphates which precipitated into PG, but the other large amount of anions such as sulfate ions (SO4 2− ) and fluoride ions (F− ) took effect of steric hindrance to prevent PO4 3− from combining with REE cations
This paper focused on the leaching of REEs and phosphorus from flotation tailings of Florida phosphate rock
Summary
Phosphorite, or phosphate rock, is a kind of igneous or sedimentary rock in which a high amount of phosphate presents as fluorapatite (Ca5 (PO4 ) F), or as hydroxystalline (Ca5 (PO4 ) OH). In the current practice of the phosphate industry, phosphorite is usually upgraded from natural phosphate ore, and the phosphate concentrate is input to an industrial process, named a wet-process, reacting with mineral acid to produce phosphoric acid and mainly further converted into phosphate fertilizers [1]. Taking fluorapatite reacting with sulfuric acid (H2 SO4 ) as an example, the decomposition process can be written as follows [2]: Ca5 (PO4 ) F + 5H2 SO4 + 5nH2 O = 5CaSO4 ·nH2 O↓+ 3H3 PO4 + HF exothermic. Most of them are present in the form of isomorphous substitutions for Ca2+ as REE-francolite, and a small amount of REEs is hosted in monazite ((Ce,La,Nd,Th)PO4 ), xenotime (YPO4 ), etc. [3,4]
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