GB2104497A - A process for producing, from aluminous siliceous materials, clinker containing alkali metal aluminate and dicalcium silicate, and use thereof - Google Patents
A process for producing, from aluminous siliceous materials, clinker containing alkali metal aluminate and dicalcium silicate, and use thereof Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- GB2104497A GB2104497A GB08218970A GB8218970A GB2104497A GB 2104497 A GB2104497 A GB 2104497A GB 08218970 A GB08218970 A GB 08218970A GB 8218970 A GB8218970 A GB 8218970A GB 2104497 A GB2104497 A GB 2104497A
- Authority
- GB
- United Kingdom
- Prior art keywords
- clinker
- alkali metal
- raw mixture
- preheating
- dicalcium silicate
- Prior art date
- Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
- Granted
Links
Classifications
-
- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C04—CEMENTS; CONCRETE; ARTIFICIAL STONE; CERAMICS; REFRACTORIES
- C04B—LIME, MAGNESIA; SLAG; CEMENTS; COMPOSITIONS THEREOF, e.g. MORTARS, CONCRETE OR LIKE BUILDING MATERIALS; ARTIFICIAL STONE; CERAMICS; REFRACTORIES; TREATMENT OF NATURAL STONE
- C04B7/00—Hydraulic cements
Landscapes
- Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Ceramic Engineering (AREA)
- Materials Engineering (AREA)
- Structural Engineering (AREA)
- Organic Chemistry (AREA)
- Compounds Of Alkaline-Earth Elements, Aluminum Or Rare-Earth Metals (AREA)
Abstract
Aluminous siliceous starting materials are mixed and ground with correction materials to produce a raw mixture comprising oxides of aluminium, silicon, calcium and alkali metal having certain mole ratios, preheating the raw mixture by suspending the raw mixture in a hot gas, and sintering the preheated material to clinker.
Description
SPECIFICATION
A process for producing, from aluminous siliceous materials, clinker containing alkali metal aluminate and dicalcium silicate, and use thereof
The present invention concerns a process (hereinafter referred to as of the kind described) for producing, from aluminous siliceous starting materials, clinker containing alkali metal aluminate and dicalcium silicate, the process including the steps of mixing and grinding the aluminous siliceous starting materials with correction materials to produce a finely ground dry raw mixture comprising oxides of aluminium, silicon, calcium and alkali metal having mole ratios CaO/SiO2 and alkali metal oxide/A1203 substantially equal to two and one respectively; and sintering the first raw mixture to clinker containing alkali metal aluminate and dicalcium silicate in a burning step.
Aluminum is produced by electrolytic reduction of alumina, Al203. Any impurities contained in the alumina, except the alkali and alkaline earth metals, are also reduced to the metallic state. Accordingly the alumina fed to the reduction cells must be very pure. Iron and silicon are particularly undesirable impurities.
The Fe2O3 content should not exceed 0.02 per cent and the SiO2 content should not exceed 0.05 per cent. For the production of some grades of metal the SiO2 content should not exceed 0.03 per cent. Other undesirable impurities in alumina are titanium and phosphorus
At present, nearly all aluminium metal is produced from alumina extracted from bauxite ores by the Bayer process. Bauxite, which consists essentially of hydrated aluminium oxide with smaller amounts of impurities such as iron and titanium oxides, is digested with a hot solution of sodium hydroxide in water to extract the alumina as a solution of sodium aluminate. The iron oxides and other impurities remain in the residue, and the alumina is precipitated as qiumina trihydrate Al(OH)3.Precipitation is effected by cooling or diluting the sodium aluminate solution and adding fine crystals of aluminium hydroxide from a previous batch to act as seed crystals.
For many years research has been carried out to develop processes of manufacturing alumina economically from non-bauxite sources, i.e. aluminous siliceous materials, comprising complex aluminium silicates.
Two interesting processes are based on the reactions occuring during sintering the aluminous siliceous material, with calcareous material such as limestone to clinker whereby the silicates are converted to dicalcium silicate (C2S) which is insoluble in water, and the aluminium is converted into water soluble aluminates. Alumina is subsequently recovered by leaching the cooled and disintegrated clinker with a caustic alkali solution, precipitating the minor amounts ofsilica present in the leaching solution in a desilication step, and precipitating alumina from the desilicated leaching solution.
Two variants have been known for the last hundred years:
(1) The lime method where a finely ground mixture of aluminous siliceous materials with a low content of alkali metals and limestone are sintered to clinker essentially consisting of dicalcium silicate and calcium aluminate.
(2) The lime soda method where a finely ground mixture of aluminous siliceous materials, preferably with a high content of alkali metals, limestone and optionally alkali-metal compounds, such as soda, is sintered to clinker essentially consisting of dicalcium silicate and alkali metal aluminate.
In both methods the sintering is carried out at at least 1200"C, and is thus far more energy-consuming than the Bayer process, but a considerable improvement in the economy of the process can be achieved by erecting an associated cement production plant utilizing the dicalcium silicate by product as a raw material for the cement production.
The major drawback of the lime method stems from the fact that calcium aluminate is rather insoluble even in aqueous alkaline solutions. Accordingly the clinker must be disintegrated to a fine dust if a reasonable amount of aluminate is to be leached out.
The essential advantage of the lime method stems from the fact that dicalcium silicate normally transforms to a less dense gamma form on cooling below 675 C causing a phenomenon known as dusting, i.e. spontaneous disintegration into a fine powder. However, this transformation does not occur in the presence of certain impurities including alkali metal oxides.
The major- drawback of the lime soda method is that the clinker burning is rather difficult for reasons explained below and that spontaneous distintegration does not occur.
On the other hand alkali metal aluminate is more easily soluble in water and alkaline solutions so that the clinker can be leached effectively even if it is only crushed to rather coarse particles.
The present invention concerns an improved version of the lime soda method.
It is known to carry out the sintering in the lime soda method analogous with the wet method known from the cement industry in which a slurry of the starting materials in water is fed to the upper end of a rotary kiln which is fired with fuel at the opposite end, c.f. e.g. US PS 1971354 (Scheidt).
In order to improve the heat economy of the method it has been suggested to use variants of the dry method known from the cement industry in which the starting materials are fed to-the upper end of a rotary kiln in a dry state, c.f. e.g. US PS 2141132 (Folger).
The sintering at the clinker burning step differs, however, significantly from the sintering of cement clinker:
Firstly, a temperature increase of approximately 10-20"C above the sintering temperature of the alumiate/C2S clinker leads to formation of larger quantities of melt, whereas in cement manufacturing much larger albow-room is allowed.
Secondly, there is in the aluminate/C2S burning a marked tendency to excessive dust formations in the kiln by which segregation of the kiln charge arises with consequent instability in the clinker formation zone.
Thirdly, there is a tendency to ring formation and formation of great lumps in the rotary kiln.
These advantages have been sought to be avoided by pelletizing the raw materials and introducing them into a rotary kiln fired co-currently with the kiln charge, c.f. US PS 2420852 (Archibald).
The object of the invention consists in providing a dry method for the sintering in the lime soda method, avoiding the above disadvantages, avoiding the pelletizing step and providing an improved heat economy.
It has surprisingly been found that this can be achieved, in accordance with the invention, by a process of the kind described, which is characterised in that the burning step comprises preheating the finely ground dry raw mixture to 700-1050"C by suspending the raw mixture in a hot gas in a preheating zone, precipitating the preheated mixture from the hot gas and sintering the precipitated material to clinker in a clinker burning zone.
As aluminous siliceous material there could be used any material that is cheap and readily available and contains at least 20% alumina, optionally available and contains at least 20% alumina, optionally occuring as complex aluminium silicates, such as naturally occuring ores like feldspars, leucite, nephelite, nepheline syenite, clay, shale, marl and siliceous bauxite, and industrial waste products such as blast furnace slag, residues from burning coal, e.g. fly ash, waste coal products, red mud from the Bayer process, white mud precipitated during the above mentioned desilication step, and others containing more or less silica.
Preferred materials are materials with a relatively high alumina content, preferably such that have a content of alkali metal approximately equivalent to the alumina content, such as leucite, nephelite and nepheline syen ite.
In order to obtain full conversion of the silicates to C2S and the alumina component to alkali metal aluminate correction materials must be added to the aluminous siliceous starting material. As this typically shows too low a content of CaO and alkali metal oxides, calcareous materials and alkali metal compounds are most often used as correction material.
By calcareous materials is to be understood any material comprising or dissociating into CaO at or below the sintering temperature, such as oxide, hydroxide or preferably carbonate of calcium, such as limestone, sea shells, coral rock, chalk, marl and industrial waste products containing CaO orCaCO3.
Alkali metal compounds include carbonates, oxides, or hydroxides of alkali metals, in particular of sodium and potassium, such as soda, including industrial waste products, in particular alkali metal carbonate recovered from the leaching solution after precipitation of alumina and kiln dust from cement plants, in particular from an associated cement production plant.
In preparing the raw mixture, aluminous siliceous starting material, calcareous materials and alkali metal compounds are mixed in proportions depending on the analysis of these materials, but in such a way that the mole ratios CaO/SiO2 and Me2O/AI203 (Me means alkali metal) are approximately equal to 2 and 1 respectively.
The aluminous siliceous materials and the correction materials are ground together or separately and the mixture is homogenized before it is fed to the burning step.
It has surprisingly been found that preheating the raw mixture by suspending it in a hot gas provides an increased stability of the sintering in the clinker burning zone compared with the usual dry method described in US PS 2141132 where the preheating takes place in the upper end of a long rotary kiln. The result is an easy leachable clinker product and improved operating conditions without the usual tendency of formation of rings and great lumps in the preheating and burning zones.
The preheating may be carried out in a, preferably multi-stage, cyclone preheater known per se for heating fine materials, and the sintering process may be carried out in a short rotary kiln.
According to a preferred example the preheating comprises repeated suspension and precipitation of the raw mixture in countercurrent to the hot gas, which is exit gas from the clinker burning zone.
A particularly rapid and efficient preheating to 700"-1050"C, preferably to 800"-925"C, and most preferably to 850D-9000C, is thus achieved and no problem related to heavy dust formation, segregation of the raw mixture and blocking of the preheater are observed.
A particular advantageous process is characterized in that the preheating comprises further heat transfer to the suspended raw mixture by introduction and combustion of fuel in the preheating zone.
Extremely stable working conditions are thus achieved, because a particularly stable feed to the clinker burning zone can be achieved and controlled by varying the amount of fuel introduced in the preheating zone. Further, the fuel supply to the clinker burning zone can be reduced significantly, eliminating the risk of overburning the clinker. Further, a particularly short treatment period is achieved, the retention time in the preheater being less than 30 seconds and the retention time in the clinker burning zone being about 10 to 15 minutes compared to the retention time of 2-5 hours in a long rotary kiln. No problems related to heavy dust formation, segregation of the raw mixture and blocking of the preheater were observed.
This development of the invention may be carried out in a multi stage cyclone preheater provided with a suspension burning furnace corresponding to the suspension calciners known from cement technology, with a material outlet connected to a short rotary kiln.
When no fuel is introduced in the preheating zone, degress of calcination of CaCO3 are typically 20-30%.
When fuel is burned in the preheating zone, a proper calcination zone is established in the preheating zone and higher degrees of calcination are obtained, typically 75-95%, preferentially 85-90%.
When the preheater includes such as calcination zone, hot exit air from an air cooler for the clinker may be used as an air supply and the exit gas from the calcination zone may be used as hot gas in the preheating zone, preferentially mixed with exit gas from the clinker burning zone. The exit gas from the clinker burning zone may be introduced into the preheating zone via the calcination zone, e.g. together with the hot air from the clinker cooler. In order to reduce alkali recirculation in the preheating zone, 10-100% of the above mentioned exit gas may by-pass the preheating zone.
An important use for the clinker produced in accordance with the invention is as an intermediate product in the production of alumina and hydraulic cement. These end products may be produced from the clinker by the steps of cooling and disintegrating the clinker; leaching the alkali metal aluminate from the disintegrated clinker by means of a caustic alkali leaching solution, thereby leaving a leaching residue containing the dicalcium silicate; precipitating alumina from the leaching solution; preparing a second raw mixture by recovering and mixing the leaching residue with calcareous correction materials; and sintering the second raw mixture to cement clinker in a second burning step. This is described in more detail in our copending application of even date ref. GJE 5082/059.
The second burning zone may comprise a kiln and in that case the correction materials in the first raw mixture may include dust from the kiln.
The invention will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Figure 1 shows a flow chart of a plant for combined production of alumina and cement including the process according to the invention; and,
Figure 2 shows an apparatus suited for carrying out the process according to the invention.
From storage bins 1, 2, 3, and 4for nepheline syenite, limestone; alkali metal correction materials and white mud, respectively, streams of these materials are directed to a raw mill 5. The fine dry product from the raw mill 5 is directed to a homogenizing storage silo 6 from which the material is fed to an apparatus 7 where it is burned to clinker containing alkali metal aluminate and dicalcium silicate. The cooled clinker is crushed in a crusher 8 and leached with alkaline extraction liquid in a leaching apparatus 9.The alkali metal aluminate containing filtrate is desilicated in a silica precipitating apparatus 10. The precipitated white mud is directed to the white mud storage bin 4 and the filtrate is directed to a precipitation tank 11 in which alumina is precipitated.The alumina is dried to a high purity alumina end product which is deposited in an alumina storage bin 12.
The dicalcium silicate residue obtained in the leaching apparatus 9 is washed with water and mixed with red clay from a red clay storage bin 14, dried in a dryer 13, admixed with limestone from a limestone storage bin 15, and directed to a raw mill 16. The fine dry product from the raw mill 16 is directed to a homogenizing storage silo 17 from which it is fed to a cement burning plant 18 where the material is burned to cement clinker. Kiln gas dust from the cement burning is directed to the alkali metal correction material storage bin 3.
The cooled clinker is stored in a clinker storage bin 19, mixed with a minor amount of gypsum from a storage bin 20 and milled to cement in a cement mill 21. The cement end product is stored in a cement storage bin 22.
Figure 2 shows a preferred construction for the apparatus 7 and for the plant 18 and thus for carrying out the essential process according to the invention. A short rotary kiln 100 is provided with a fuel inlet 101, a clinker air cooler 102, a riser pipe 103 for exit gas provided with a by-pass duct 104, and a hot air inlet duct 105 connected to the clinker cooler 102. The mixture of kiln exit gas and hot air is introduced in a suspension calciner 106 provided with a fuel inlet 107 and an inlet 108 for preheated raw material which is calcined in suspended state and carried to a precipitation cyclone 109 with the exit gas from the suspension calciner.
The precipitated material is directed to a material inlet 110 in the rotary kiln 100 and the hot gas from which the material is precipitated is directed to a multistage cyclone preheater, comprising three cyclones 111, 112 and 113, provided with a raw material inlet 114 and a gas outlet 115.
The method according to the invention was carried out on an industrial scale in a combined alumina/cement production plant having the flow sheet shown in Figure 1. The burning steps took place in an apparatus as shown in Figure 2. Test results from a typical run appear from the following example.
Example 1) Alumina Recovery
240 units by weight of nepheline syenite and 460 units by weight of limestone having the analysis shown in Table I (in which all percentages are by weight); together with 20 units by weight of white mud containing about 15-25%AI203, 5-15% SiO2, and 5-20% alkali metal oxides; and 10 units by weight of by pass dust containing about 40% alkali metal oxides from the second burning step were ground to a fineness corresponding to 25% greater than 0.08mm.
The fine mixture was homogenized to a first raw mixture having mole ratios CaO/SiO/2 and Me2O/AI203 (Me means alkali metal) equal to approximately 2 and 1, respectively, and fed to an apparatus as shown in
Figure 2 comprising a cyclone preheater fed with exit gas from a suspension furnace with a gas inlet connected to the exit gas outlet of a short rotary kiln and the exit air outlet of a grate clinker cooler cooling the clinker produced in the short rotary kiln. Only 75% of the rotary kiln exit gas was directed to the suspension furnace the remaining 25% was removed and by-passed in order to reduce the alkali concentration of the hot gases in the kiln suspension furnace and cyclone preheater.
In less than 30 seconds the raw mixture was preheated to about 750"C in the cyclone preheater and in less than 2 seconds it was heated to 850-900"C in the suspension furnace and directed to the rotary kiln where it was sintered to clinker at a sintering temperature of 13200C. The retention time in the rotary kiln was only 10 to 15 minutes.
490 units by weight of clinker were obtained. The clinker was crushed to below 2 mm and leached with alkaline extraction liquid. A filtrate containing 80 units by weight of alkali metal aluminate of high purity (containing less than 3% SiO2 and less than 0.1% Fe2O3 on dry weight basis) and a C2S residue was obtained.
The filtrate was first subjected to a desil ification process in which the small amounts of silica present in the filtrate were removed from the filtrate and converted to the white mud mentioned above and then alumina was precipitated by reducing the pH-value of the filtrate. A high quality alumina product was thus obtained with an A1203 recovery of 78%.
The C2S residue was washed with water and showed an Al203 content of less than 2.5% and an alkali metal oxide content of less than 2% indicating an efficient conversion of the complex aluminium silicates to alkali metal aluminate and C2S.
2J Cement Production
1000 units by weight of a dry cement raw mixture was prepared by drying 670 units by weight of the C2S residue and 70 units by weight of red clay and grinding these components with 550 units by weight of limestone to a fineness corresponding to 25% greater than 50 micron. Analysis of the red clay, limestone and cement raw mixture is shown in Table I.
The cement raw mixture was burnt to cement clinker in a second burning step in an apparatus of the design shown in Figure 2.
Retention times were: in the cyclone preheater less than 30 seconds; in the suspension furnace less than 2 seconds; and in the short rotary kiln less than 20 minutes. Kiln by pass was 60%.
Material was introduced into the suspension furnace at about 750"C; the temperature in the suspension furnace was 850-900"C; and the sintering temperature was about 1450"C.
790 units by weight of cement clinker were produced. The kiln by pass dust amounted to 15 units by weight. Analysis of the cement clinker is shown in Table I.
The cement clinker was ground and mixed with 30 units by weight of gypsum in the usual way producing 720 units by weight of portland cement of high quality with low alkali and free lime content.
TABLE I
Nepheline Cement Cement Material Syenite Limestone Red Clay Raw Mix Clinker
% % % % % At203 20.6 0.2 23.8 3.0 3.8
Na2O 8.9 Total Oxides 0.04 Total Oxides Total Oxides K2O 6.3 less than 0.2 0.13 lessthan2.0 less than 0.5 CaO 1.3 50.0 0.4 53.2 66.7 CO2 1.3 40.9 0.6 18.5
SiO2 51.3 1.0 20.3 18.6 23.3 Fe203 3.3 0.2 6.5 1.7 2.0
Claims (5)
1. A process for producing, from aluminous siliceous starting materials, clinker containing alkali metal aluminate and dicalcium silicate, the process including the steps of mixing and grinding the aluminous siliceous starting material with correction materials to produce a finely ground dry raw mixture comprising oxides of aluminium, silicon, calcium and alkali metal having mole ratios CaO/SiO2 and alkali metal oxide/A1203 substantially equal to two and one respectively; and sintering the raw mixture to clinker containing alkali metal aluminate and dicalcium silicate in a burning step; characterized in that the burning step comprises preheating the finely ground dry raw mixture to 700-1050"C by suspending the raw mixture in a hot gas in a preheating zone, precipitating the preheated mixture from the hot gas and sintering the precipitated material to clinker in a clinker burning zone.
2. A process according to claim 1, characterized in that the preheating comprises repeated suspension and precipitation of the raw mixture in countercurrent to the hot gas, and in that the hot gas is exit gas from the clinker burning zone.
3. A process according to claim 1 or claim 2, characterized in that the preheating comprises further heat transfer to the suspended raw mixture by introduction and combustion of fuel in the preheating zone.
4. A process for producing alumina and hydraulic cement, characterized by the steps of producing a clinker containing alkali metal aluminate and dicalcium silicate by a process according to any one of the preceding claims; cooling and disintegrating the clinker; leaching the alkali metal aluminate from the disintegrated clinker by means of a caustic alkali leaching solution, thereby leaving a leaching residue containing the dicalcium silicate; precipitating alumina from the leaching solution; preparing a second raw mixture by recovering and mixing the leaching residue with calcareous correction materials; and sintering the second raw mixture to cement clinker in a second burning step.
5. A process according to claim 4, characterized in that the second burning step utilises a kiln and the correction materials in the first raw mixture include dust from the kiln.
Priority Applications (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
GB08218970A GB2104497B (en) | 1981-07-06 | 1982-07-01 | A process for producing from aluminous siliceous meterials clinker containing alkali metal aluminate and dicalcium silicate and use therof |
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
GB8120849 | 1981-07-06 | ||
GB08218970A GB2104497B (en) | 1981-07-06 | 1982-07-01 | A process for producing from aluminous siliceous meterials clinker containing alkali metal aluminate and dicalcium silicate and use therof |
Publications (2)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
GB2104497A true GB2104497A (en) | 1983-03-09 |
GB2104497B GB2104497B (en) | 1984-09-19 |
Family
ID=26280033
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
GB08218970A Expired GB2104497B (en) | 1981-07-06 | 1982-07-01 | A process for producing from aluminous siliceous meterials clinker containing alkali metal aluminate and dicalcium silicate and use therof |
Country Status (1)
Country | Link |
---|---|
GB (1) | GB2104497B (en) |
Cited By (2)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
WO2007064186A1 (en) * | 2005-11-30 | 2007-06-07 | Concretos Translúcidos, S. De R.L. De C.V. | Production method and cement compositions which rapidly acquire good strength and which are resistant to corrosion |
CN110183123A (en) * | 2019-03-28 | 2019-08-30 | 福建鼎盛元环保科技有限公司 | A kind of production line and its technique preparing sulphate aluminium cement using white clay |
-
1982
- 1982-07-01 GB GB08218970A patent/GB2104497B/en not_active Expired
Cited By (2)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
WO2007064186A1 (en) * | 2005-11-30 | 2007-06-07 | Concretos Translúcidos, S. De R.L. De C.V. | Production method and cement compositions which rapidly acquire good strength and which are resistant to corrosion |
CN110183123A (en) * | 2019-03-28 | 2019-08-30 | 福建鼎盛元环保科技有限公司 | A kind of production line and its technique preparing sulphate aluminium cement using white clay |
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
GB2104497B (en) | 1984-09-19 |
Similar Documents
Publication | Publication Date | Title |
---|---|---|
US3295924A (en) | Process for recovering iron, titanium and aluminum from the red slurries obtained in processing bauxite by the bayer process | |
CN102351226B (en) | Method for producing aluminum oxide from fly ash | |
CN101028935B (en) | Method for producing cement by extracting alumina and its waste residue from coal gangue | |
CN101348268A (en) | Two methods for comprehensively utilizing boron mud, magnesite and talc to prepare magnesium oxide and silicon dioxide | |
CN101028936B (en) | A method of extracting alumina and its waste residue from high-alumina fly ash to produce cement | |
US4512809A (en) | Process for producing, from aluminous siliceous materials, clinker containing alkali metal aluminate and dicalcium silicate, and use thereof | |
WO1989001913A1 (en) | Calcination of calcium carbonate and blends thereof | |
US4256709A (en) | Method for the production of alumina | |
US4226632A (en) | Process for producing high-purity alumina and hydraulic cement | |
CN110668482A (en) | Dry-process aluminum fluoride production method | |
US3776717A (en) | Method for processing of red mud | |
US2964383A (en) | Processing of ferruginous aluminum ores | |
US2242258A (en) | Manufacture of cement and alkali metal aluminate | |
US5374310A (en) | Hydrolyzed chlorosilicon by-product addition to cement | |
GB2104497A (en) | A process for producing, from aluminous siliceous materials, clinker containing alkali metal aluminate and dicalcium silicate, and use thereof | |
Ghaemmaghami et al. | Alumina extraction by lime-soda sinter process from low-grade bauxite soil of Semirom mine | |
CN105692666B (en) | A kind of method of aluminous fly-ash extraction aluminum oxide | |
CN108623293A (en) | The technique that a kind of ardealite and red mud prepare high white pottery ceramic material coproduction acid | |
GB2102407A (en) | Producing hydraulic cement from dicalcium silicate | |
RU2555980C2 (en) | Production of cement clinker | |
CN103537475B (en) | With the method for comprehensive utilization of rear basic refractory | |
US6528028B2 (en) | Process for treating bauxite in which a desilication product and an insoluble residure are separately precipitated | |
US3770469A (en) | Process for preparing self-disintegrating products containing dicalcium silicate | |
AU753833B2 (en) | Process for treating bauxite | |
CN105480996A (en) | Method for extracting Al2O3 from coal gangue |
Legal Events
Date | Code | Title | Description |
---|---|---|---|
PCNP | Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee |