Salt Cake John N. Hyrn

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Salt Cake Management at

Secondary Aluminum
Smelters:
A Case Study of Best Practice

John N. Hryn
Argonne National Laboratory

2007 Annual Meeting; February 25-March 1, 2007 Orlando, FL, USA


Salt cake
By product of aluminum recycling
Dross processing
Potential value of components
Aluminum metal
Recoverable by crushing, screening, magnetics
Salt (flux)
Low value, wet processing
NMP (non-metallic product)
High value potential (alumina oxide)
NMP Residuals are problematic
Unrecovered aluminum
Na/K-Cl/F
AlN (Aluminum nitride)

2007 Annual Meeting; February 25-March 1, 2007 Orlando, FL, USA


Salt Cake Recycling
Salt cake (salt slag)
Crushing/milling and screening (recover Al fractions)
Washing/leaching
Filtration (recover NMP for further treatment)
Crystallization (recover salt for use in flux)
Vapor recompression to minimize water use

Total recycling
Aleris (Alumitech) USA
ALSA Germany, Canada (US ? OH, KY, TN)
BEFESA Spain, UK, (South America ?)
Others ?

2007 Annual Meeting; February 25-March 1, 2007 Orlando, FL, USA


Hazardous characteristics of salt cake
result from poor processing
Reactivity
Water and air (pyrophoric)
Health
Off-gas can be noxious, toxic
Primarily ammonia (NH3)
Related to chemical composition
Residual aluminum content
Presence of aluminum nitride
Moisture
All resulting from aluminum dross processing
Improved processing can result in salt cake with
non-hazardous characteristics (benign)

2007 Annual Meeting; February 25-March 1, 2007 Orlando, FL, USA


Consequences of poor practice in
dross processing
Poor quality of salt cake
Hazardous characteristics
Increased legal and environmental scrutiny
Difficult to place in the marketplace

Recycling salt cake (wet processing)


Not energy efficient
More energy is used than recovered
Not environmentally efficient
Generate more waste compared to landfill
Not economic?
Driven by landfill costs and regulations

2007 Annual Meeting; February 25-March 1, 2007 Orlando, FL, USA


What is poor practice?
A-L-N
Presence of aluminum nitride (AlN)
Root of ALL major energy and environmental
inefficiencies

Presence of un-recovered aluminum


Poor business practice
Reactivity potential

2007 Annual Meeting; February 25-March 1, 2007 Orlando, FL, USA


Effect of presence of aluminum nitride
Reactivity with water
AlN + H2O Al2O3 + NH3
NH3 + H2O NH4OH (pH increases)
High pH dissolves alumina film on un-recovered
aluminum particle surface
Exposes aluminum surface to reaction
Al + H2O Al2O3 + H2 (+ heat)
Hot H2 + O2 (air) fire
Worst case
Pyrophoric
Enhanced by processing Mg, Si, Zn containing alloys
Best case
NH3 noxious fumes

2007 Annual Meeting; February 25-March 1, 2007 Orlando, FL, USA


Elimination of aluminum nitride - 1
Source:
NOx from air or oxygen-enriched-air burners
NOx much more reactive than N2 with aluminum
Solution:
low NOx burner (good)
Oxy-fuel burner (better)

2007 Annual Meeting; February 25-March 1, 2007 Orlando, FL, USA


Elimination of aluminum nitride - 2
Source:
N2 infiltration into furnace when tapping
More problematic with oxy-fuel burners
Higher surface temperatures

Solution:
Two-door rotary furnace design
Better heat retention (economic)
Less nitrogen gas infiltration

2007 Annual Meeting; February 25-March 1, 2007 Orlando, FL, USA


Elimination of aluminum nitride - 3
Source:
Aluminum processing (recycling)
melting furnaces
burners, air infiltration

Solution:
Minimize dross formation
Keep aluminum surface quiescent

2007 Annual Meeting; February 25-March 1, 2007 Orlando, FL, USA


Treatment of aluminum nitride
Recycling salt cake NMP
Wet process (total recycling)
Must scrub aluminum nitride from NMP
Consumption of acid
NH4Cl or NH4SO4 product
Dry process for NMP
NMP must be calcined and air-reacted
Form aluminum oxide and NOx
Also reaction of residual aluminum
Also residual Cl/F vaporized

Both processes are environmentally inefficient


More waste generated compared to landfill

2007 Annual Meeting; February 25-March 1, 2007 Orlando, FL, USA


Best environmental practice for
salt cake management
Rotary furnace
Oxy-fuel burners
Maximize aluminum recovery
Limit air infiltration
Two door design
Dross cooling
limit thermite reaction
Dry processing
Keep salt cake dry
Recover residual aluminum (crush, screen, magnetics)
Disposal of salt and NMP residue in landfill
Lined (RCRA C standard)

2007 Annual Meeting; February 25-March 1, 2007 Orlando, FL, USA


Future of salt cake recycling
How much AlN can be tolerated in salt cake?
NONE
Processing to strip or react away AlN
NOT environmentally sound at any level
NMP product from total recycling must have
inconsequential amount of AlN
Determined by market
Market cannot diminish value of NMP because of
hazardous character

Total recycling of salt cake will be


environmentally acceptable only when aluminum
processors and dross processors limit (eliminate)
aluminum nitride formation during processing

2007 Annual Meeting; February 25-March 1, 2007 Orlando, FL, USA


Acknowledgements
Co-author:
Miguel Lizaur, Iberica de Aleaciones Ligeras, S.L.
(IDALSA), Pradilla de Ebro (Zaragoza), Spain

Funding:
US DOE, Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable
Energy, Industrial Technologies Program

Companies:
IDALSA, Aleris (IMCO and Alumitech), Secat

2007 Annual Meeting; February 25-March 1, 2007 Orlando, FL, USA

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