C22B19/30

Treatment method of chlorine-containing zinc oxide secondary material

The invention discloses a treatment method of a chlorine-containing zinc oxide secondary material, which comprises the following steps: 1) leaching the chlorine-containing zinc oxide secondary material I through an acid solution; 2) selectively extracting zinc through di-(2-ethylhexyl)phosphoric acid (P204)-kerosene solvent; 3) implementing stripping-electrolysis zinc recovery; 4) repeating steps 1)-4); 5) taking out the raffinate obtained from the Step (4), mixing the residual taken out raffinate with chlorine-containing zinc oxide secondary material II when balance on chlorine ion input and taking out is achieved; carrying out liquid-solid separation; leaching the separated deposit through acid raffinate of the step 1); 6) after separated solution achieves preset conditions, purifying the chlorine-containing aqueous phase; 7) evaporating and concentrating to crystallize out KCl and NaCl products. The invention is environment-friendly and energy-saving, and free from process wastewater emission; production cost is greatly reduced and secondary pollution of the current dechloridation process is eliminated thoroughly.

Zinc production method

A zinc production method includes a reaction step such as a leaching step (101) of bringing electric arc furnace dust (1) containing zinc oxide or the like into contact with a chlorine gas (8) to obtain a zinc oxide component in the electric arc furnace dust (1) or the like as crude zinc chloride (3), a purification step (102) of heating the crude zinc chloride (3) obtained at the reaction step to produce zinc chloride vapor, and cooling and condensing the zinc chloride vapor, thereby obtaining purified zinc chloride (6), and an electrolysis step (103) of electrolyzing the purified zinc chloride (6) obtained at the purification step (102) in a molten state to obtain a zinc melt (9) and the chlorine gas (8).

Zinc production method

A zinc production method includes a reaction step such as a leaching step (101) of bringing electric arc furnace dust (1) containing zinc oxide or the like into contact with a chlorine gas (8) to obtain a zinc oxide component in the electric arc furnace dust (1) or the like as crude zinc chloride (3), a purification step (102) of heating the crude zinc chloride (3) obtained at the reaction step to produce zinc chloride vapor, and cooling and condensing the zinc chloride vapor, thereby obtaining purified zinc chloride (6), and an electrolysis step (103) of electrolyzing the purified zinc chloride (6) obtained at the purification step (102) in a molten state to obtain a zinc melt (9) and the chlorine gas (8).

Process for recovering non-ferrous metals from industrial mineral residues

A process is described for recovering a non-ferrous metal from a first solid residue comprising iron. In this process, the first solid residue is mixed with a second solid residue including sulphur, thereby obtaining a particulate mixture. The particulate mixture is subjected to a roasting step at a temperature of at least 650 C. to obtain a roasted mixture, and the roasted mixture is subjected to leaching in a liquid at a pH of at least 5.5 to obtain a solution enriched with the non-ferrous metal.

Process for recovering non-ferrous metals from industrial mineral residues

A process is described for recovering a non-ferrous metal from a first solid residue comprising iron. In this process, the first solid residue is mixed with a second solid residue including sulphur, thereby obtaining a particulate mixture. The particulate mixture is subjected to a roasting step at a temperature of at least 650 C. to obtain a roasted mixture, and the roasted mixture is subjected to leaching in a liquid at a pH of at least 5.5 to obtain a solution enriched with the non-ferrous metal.

Method for the Separation of Zinc and Iron from Electric Arc Furnace Baghouse Dust
20250011897 · 2025-01-09 · ·

Method for the separation of Zinc and Iron from electric arc furnace baghouse dust Provided are new and improved novel processes and continuous ion exchange/continuous ion chromatography (CIX/CIC) systems for the separation of iron and zinc from electric arc furnace baghouse dust.

Method for the Separation of Zinc and Iron from Electric Arc Furnace Baghouse Dust
20250011897 · 2025-01-09 · ·

Method for the separation of Zinc and Iron from electric arc furnace baghouse dust Provided are new and improved novel processes and continuous ion exchange/continuous ion chromatography (CIX/CIC) systems for the separation of iron and zinc from electric arc furnace baghouse dust.

METHOD FOR RECYCLING VALUABLE METALS FROM SPENT BATTERIES

A process has been developed in order to recover and recycle the metals present in spent batteries, including alkaline spent batteries alone or mixed with other types of spent batteries. This method shows a good potential in terms of metals recoveries efficiencies and economic feasibility. Firstly, the spent batteries are crushed (optionally after having been frozen in the case of spent batteries of mixed types). Then, the undesirable parts (plastics, steel cases, papers, etc.) are removed by screening. The collected powder, containing the metals, is mixed with a solution of sulfuric acid in the presence of a reducing agent. The solid/liquid separation is carried out by filtration and the leachate is purified in order to selectively recover the metals. The purification steps consist of: a) recovering Zn by solvent extraction followed by an electrowinning process; b) simultaneously recovering Mn and Cd by solvent extraction process; c) selectively recovering Cd from the mixture solution of Cd and Mn by electrowinning process; d) precipitating Mn from a pure solution of MnSO.sub.4 in a carbonate form; e) removing the impurities present in the effluent by solvent extraction in order to obtain a pure NiSO.sub.4 solution; f) precipitating Ni from a NiSO.sub.4 solution in a carbonate form.

METHOD FOR RECYCLING VALUABLE METALS FROM SPENT BATTERIES

A process has been developed in order to recover and recycle the metals present in spent batteries, including alkaline spent batteries alone or mixed with other types of spent batteries. This method shows a good potential in terms of metals recoveries efficiencies and economic feasibility. Firstly, the spent batteries are crushed (optionally after having been frozen in the case of spent batteries of mixed types). Then, the undesirable parts (plastics, steel cases, papers, etc.) are removed by screening. The collected powder, containing the metals, is mixed with a solution of sulfuric acid in the presence of a reducing agent. The solid/liquid separation is carried out by filtration and the leachate is purified in order to selectively recover the metals. The purification steps consist of: a) recovering Zn by solvent extraction followed by an electrowinning process; b) simultaneously recovering Mn and Cd by solvent extraction process; c) selectively recovering Cd from the mixture solution of Cd and Mn by electrowinning process; d) precipitating Mn from a pure solution of MnSO.sub.4 in a carbonate form; e) removing the impurities present in the effluent by solvent extraction in order to obtain a pure NiSO.sub.4 solution; f) precipitating Ni from a NiSO.sub.4 solution in a carbonate form.

RECLAMATION OF METAL FROM COKED CATALYST

Removing metal from metal-carbon material includes contacting the metal-carbon material with hydrogen chloride, thereby yielding a metal chloride in the gas phase and a solid product comprising carbon. The metal-carbon material and the solid product may both contain elemental carbon. A concentration of metal in the solid product is typically less than 1 wt %.