Abstract

This work presents chemical modeling of solubilities of metal sulfates in aqueous solutions of sulfuric acid at high temperatures. Calculations were compared with experimental solubility measurements of hematite (Fe 2O 3) in aqueous ternary and quaternary systems of H 2SO 4, MgSO 4 and Al 2(SO 4) 3 at high temperatures. A hybrid model of ion-association and electrolyte non-random two liquid (ENRTL) theory was employed to fit solubility data in three ternary systems H 2SO 4–MgSO 4–H 2O, H 2SO 4–Al 2(SO 4) 3–H 2O at 235–270 °C and H 2SO 4–Fe 2(SO 4) 3–H 2O at 150–270 °C. Employing the Aspen Plus™ property program, the electrolyte NRTL local composition model was used for calculating activity coefficients of the ions Al 3+, Mg 2+ Fe 3+ and SO 4 2−, HSO 4 −, OH −, H 3O +, respectively, as well as molecular species. The solid phases were hydronium alunite (H 3O)Al 3(SO 4) 2(OH) 6, hematite Fe 2O 3 and magnesium sulfate monohydrate (MgSO 4)·H 2O which were employed as constraint precipitation solids in calculating the metal sulfate solubilities. A correlation for the equilibrium constants of the association reactions of complex species versus temperature was implemented. Based on the maximum-likelihood principle, the binary interaction energy parameters for the ionic species as well as the coefficients for equilibrium constants of the reactions were obtained simultaneously using the solubility data of the ternary systems. Following that, the solubilities of metal sulfates in the quaternary systems H 2SO 4–Fe 2(SO 4) 3–MgSO 4–H 2O, H 2SO 4–Fe 2(SO 4) 3–Al 2(SO 4) 3–H 2O at 250 °C and H 2SO 4–Al 2(SO 4) 3–MgSO 4–H 2O at 230–270 °C were predicted. The calculated results were in excellent agreement with the experimental data.

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