Assessment of soda ash calcination treatment of Turkish trona ore

Trona is relatively rare, non-metallic mineral, Na2CO3 · NaHCO3 · 2H2O. The pure material contains 70.3% sodium carbonate and by calcination the excess CO2 and water can be driven off, yielding natural soda ash. The terms soda ash and sodium carbonate are used interchangeably. Trona calcining is a k...

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Main Authors: Gezer Sibel, Atalay Umit
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2016-01-01
Series:E3S Web of Conferences
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/20160801013
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spelling doaj-237507e79bbb4d3ca6de514f18de17602021-02-02T03:12:46ZengEDP SciencesE3S Web of Conferences2267-12422016-01-0180101310.1051/e3sconf/20160801013e3sconf_mec2016_01013Assessment of soda ash calcination treatment of Turkish trona oreGezer Sibel0Atalay Umit1Republic of Turkey Ministry of Energy and Natural Resources, Nuclear Energy Project Implementation DepartmentMiddle East Technical University, Mining Engineering DepartmentTrona is relatively rare, non-metallic mineral, Na2CO3 · NaHCO3 · 2H2O. The pure material contains 70.3% sodium carbonate and by calcination the excess CO2 and water can be driven off, yielding natural soda ash. The terms soda ash and sodium carbonate are used interchangeably. Trona calcining is a key process step in production of soda ash (sodium carbonate anhydrate) from the relatively cheap trona ore. The calcination reaction may proceeds in a sequence of steps. Depending on the conditions, it may result in formation of either sodium carbonate monohydrate (Na2CO3 · H2O), sodium sesquicarbonate or weigschederite (Na2CO3 · 3NaHCO3). The Beypazarı Turkish trona deposit is the second largest deposit in the world with the content of 84% trona. The decomposition of trona appeared to be a single stage process across the temperature range studied (150-200 °C) with the representative samples of different size fractions in the draught up metallurgical furnace. The optimum particle size and calcination time were −6.35 mm and 30 minutes, respectively, at calcination temperature of 175 °C in a metallurgical furnace. Microwave-induced dry calcination of trona was possible and 5 minutes of calcination time at a power level of 900 was sufficient for complete calcination of −6.35 mm feed. This includes short time calcinations with the goal of improving economics and simplifying the thermal process.http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/20160801013
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gezer Sibel
Atalay Umit
spellingShingle Gezer Sibel
Atalay Umit
Assessment of soda ash calcination treatment of Turkish trona ore
E3S Web of Conferences
author_facet Gezer Sibel
Atalay Umit
author_sort Gezer Sibel
title Assessment of soda ash calcination treatment of Turkish trona ore
title_short Assessment of soda ash calcination treatment of Turkish trona ore
title_full Assessment of soda ash calcination treatment of Turkish trona ore
title_fullStr Assessment of soda ash calcination treatment of Turkish trona ore
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of soda ash calcination treatment of Turkish trona ore
title_sort assessment of soda ash calcination treatment of turkish trona ore
publisher EDP Sciences
series E3S Web of Conferences
issn 2267-1242
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Trona is relatively rare, non-metallic mineral, Na2CO3 · NaHCO3 · 2H2O. The pure material contains 70.3% sodium carbonate and by calcination the excess CO2 and water can be driven off, yielding natural soda ash. The terms soda ash and sodium carbonate are used interchangeably. Trona calcining is a key process step in production of soda ash (sodium carbonate anhydrate) from the relatively cheap trona ore. The calcination reaction may proceeds in a sequence of steps. Depending on the conditions, it may result in formation of either sodium carbonate monohydrate (Na2CO3 · H2O), sodium sesquicarbonate or weigschederite (Na2CO3 · 3NaHCO3). The Beypazarı Turkish trona deposit is the second largest deposit in the world with the content of 84% trona. The decomposition of trona appeared to be a single stage process across the temperature range studied (150-200 °C) with the representative samples of different size fractions in the draught up metallurgical furnace. The optimum particle size and calcination time were −6.35 mm and 30 minutes, respectively, at calcination temperature of 175 °C in a metallurgical furnace. Microwave-induced dry calcination of trona was possible and 5 minutes of calcination time at a power level of 900 was sufficient for complete calcination of −6.35 mm feed. This includes short time calcinations with the goal of improving economics and simplifying the thermal process.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/20160801013
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