EP0277422B1 - Chemical treatment of liquors - Google Patents

Chemical treatment of liquors Download PDF

Info

Publication number
EP0277422B1
EP0277422B1 EP19870310701 EP87310701A EP0277422B1 EP 0277422 B1 EP0277422 B1 EP 0277422B1 EP 19870310701 EP19870310701 EP 19870310701 EP 87310701 A EP87310701 A EP 87310701A EP 0277422 B1 EP0277422 B1 EP 0277422B1
Authority
EP
European Patent Office
Prior art keywords
liquor
precipitate
mixing
pipeline
reagent
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.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
EP19870310701
Other languages
German (de)
French (fr)
Other versions
EP0277422A3 (en
EP0277422A2 (en
Inventor
Michael Joseph Bowe
Lionel Houston Ford
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
UK Atomic Energy Authority
Original Assignee
UK Atomic Energy Authority
Priority date (The priority date 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 date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from GB868629320A external-priority patent/GB8629320D0/en
Application filed by UK Atomic Energy Authority filed Critical UK Atomic Energy Authority
Publication of EP0277422A2 publication Critical patent/EP0277422A2/en
Publication of EP0277422A3 publication Critical patent/EP0277422A3/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of EP0277422B1 publication Critical patent/EP0277422B1/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G21NUCLEAR PHYSICS; NUCLEAR ENGINEERING
    • G21FPROTECTION AGAINST X-RADIATION, GAMMA RADIATION, CORPUSCULAR RADIATION OR PARTICLE BOMBARDMENT; TREATING RADIOACTIVELY CONTAMINATED MATERIAL; DECONTAMINATION ARRANGEMENTS THEREFOR
    • G21F9/00Treating radioactively contaminated material; Decontamination arrangements therefor
    • G21F9/04Treating liquids
    • G21F9/06Processing
    • G21F9/10Processing by flocculation

Definitions

  • This invention relates to chemical processes in which a bulk quantity of liquor is to be treated with one or more chemical reagents.
  • One form of treatment for which the invention has application is in the precipitation of solids from liquors such as waste liquors arising in the nuclear fuel reprocessing and water treatment industries.
  • a number of precipitation processes are employed by the nuclear industry as a means of decontaminating aqueous waste streams.
  • the main contaminants are fission products and actinides.
  • Similar processes are also employed by the water treatment industries for removal of heavy metal species.
  • the effectiveness of the precipitation process depends to a large extent on factors such as the type of chemical additive used to treat the waste liquor at the various pH stages, the degree of control employed during the pH conditioning of the liquor and the degree of mixing within the reaction zones.
  • the effectiveness of the process also depends upon the degree of the solid/ liquid separation after the precipitation process is completed.
  • the first stage separation of the solid precipitate from the aqueous phase is usually achieved by gravity settling in the same reaction vessel used to produce the precipitate.
  • Control of pH in such large precipitate formation vessels may be difficult to achieve because after initial neutralisation to pH 1-2 further small additions of caustic solution (the usual neutralisation agent employed) can produce large changes in pH. Because the pH system is so inherently sensitive to caustic addition it is not inconceivable that large local variations in pH may exist within such tanks.
  • apparatus for combining and mixing a bulk flow of liquor with at least one reagent for reaction with the liquor, said apparatus comprising a pipeline along which the liquor flows, at least one fluidic mixing device in the pipeline for combining the liquor with at least one reagent and thoroughly mixing the same, the combined liquor and reagent(s) thereafter continuing to flow along a pipeline section downstream of the or each fluidic device.
  • the pipeline section may be designed in terms of dimensions and flowrates to allow an appropriate reaction residence time before the bulk liquor flow encounters the next fluidic mixing device or enters a vessel for subsequent processing of the liquor.
  • liquor-processing apparatus comprising a pipeline for conducting a bulk flow of liquor, at least one fluidic mixing device in the pipeline for combining the liquor with at least a precipitation-promoting reagent and thoroughly mixing the same, the or each fluidic mixing device being followed by a pipeline section affording a reaction residence time as the liquor and reagent(s) continue flowing along the pipeline, and means for effecting separation of the precipitate from the liquor.
  • the apparatus comprises a cascade of at least two fluidic mixing devices forming mixing junctions at spaced positions along the pipeline.
  • At least one of the fluidic mixing devices may be designed to admit simultaneously at least two streams of reagent flow along with the bulk liquor flow.
  • a proportion of the precipitate derived in the course of separation by the separation means is recycled back to said pipeline for mixing with the bulk liquor flow via said fluidic mixing device or devices.
  • the separating means may comprise a settling or thickening vessel into which the mixed liquor and reagent(s), including any recycled precipitate, are fed from said pipeline whereby at least a proportion of the solids content tends to settle towards the base of the vessel, and the separating means preferably further comprises at least one centrifugal separator means (e.g. a hydrocyclone) for receiving from said settling vessel a proportion of the vessel contents to effect further separation of the solids and liquid phases, at least a fraction of the solids-bearing stream from the centrifugal separator means being recycled back to the pipeline as specified above.
  • the flow rate of the recycled stream may be variable according to requirements.
  • the flow of the bulk liquor may be continuous and the transfer of liquor from the settling vessel to the centrifugal separator means may also be continuous.
  • the sludge accumulating towards the base of the settling vessel may be intermittently or continuously withdrawn for subsequent processing, e.g. dewatering. In practice, intermittent withdrawal may be employed to enable the level of the vessel contents to be maintained between predetermined limits while liquor is continuously fed into the vessel from said pipeline and withdrawn from the vessel for transfer to the hydrocyclone(s).
  • the waste liquor to be treated will be delivered via pipeline 10 to a buffer tank 12.
  • the liquor within the buffer tank will then be transferred continuously along a pipeline 14 using a steam ejector 16 or a suitable fluidic pump unit (such as a double diode pump).
  • mixing units At a number of points on the pipeline (marked A, B, C and D on Figure 1) will be located mixing units.
  • the mixing units will each be followed by a downstream section of pipework whose volume is calculated to give an appropriate reaction residence time.
  • the system will approximate to a plug flow reactor with reactants being admitted at the mixing junctions.
  • Such an arrangement serves to limit the degree of backmixing in the system and allows some reduction in the proportion of colloidal sized particles normally to be anticipated for a system with significant backmixing (such as a stirred tank reactor).
  • a precipitation-promoting additive such as caustic solution, and/or other chemical reagents is introduced at each of the mixing units A, B, and D.
  • the reagent flows into the mixer units are controlled by closed loop systems 20 sensing at points 22, 24, 26 a parameter such as pH.
  • a single reagent stream or several reagent streams can converge at each mixing unit.
  • the mixing unit may comprise either a Vortex type device as shown in Figures 2 and 3 or an entrainment type device as shown in Figure 3.
  • the treated liquor stream containing the precipitate formed by the chemical conditioning is then directed from the pipeline 14 into a thickening tank 30.
  • the precipitate has an opportunity to settle to a thickened slurry.
  • a reverse flow diverter pump unit 32 Located at the base of the tank is a reverse flow diverter pump unit 32 connected to an air piston 34 elevated above the maximum liquor level 36 in the tank.
  • the RFD pump 32 delivers a metered volume of thickened slurry via pipeline 38 to the next stage in the process, for example, a de-watering stage employing an ultra filter unit.
  • a steam ejector or a suitable fluidic pump unit 40 located in the thickening vessel at an elevation above the thickening zone.
  • the pump 40 continuously delivers the precipitate-bearing solution to a hydrocyclone unit 42.
  • the hydrocyclone unit 42 may comprise either a single hydrocyclone element or a multiplicity of elements connected in series or parallel as required.
  • the underflow liquor from the hydrocyclone unit containing the majority of the precipitated solids is then recycled, via a breakpot 44 and line 46, back to the mixer cascade (i.e. at mixer C in Figure 1) in order that it may act as a precipitate seeding solution. Such an operation may reduce the number of colloidal sized particles in solution.
  • the seeding flow stream is desirably introduced at a liquor pH value corresponding to the onset of precipitate nucleation.
  • the overflow liquor from the hydrocyclone unit containing a reduced proportion of solid material is then transferred, via breakpot 48 and line 50, to the next stage in the process which could be a further chemical conditioning treatment using a cascade of fluidic mixers and hydrocyclone unit or it may be an ultrafiltration unit employed to polish the hydrocyclone overflow liquor before final discharge.
  • each mixer may be of the vortex type as shown in which the bulk liquor flow and the reagent(s) are fed tangentially via tangentially directed inlets 60 into a vortex chamber 62 in which they undergo thorough mixing before discharging as a mixture via centrally located outlet 64.
  • inlets 60 only two inlets 60 are illustrated there may be more than two depending on the number of reagents to be mixed with the bulk flow of liquor.
  • Figure 4 shows an entrainment-type mixer in which the bulk flow of liquor (fed in the direction 70) enters a Venturi-type constriction and the reagent or reagents to be mixed intensively with the bulk flow are introduced via inlets 72 which enter at the narrow waist section of the constriction where the flow velocity is increased thereby enhancing mixing of the reactants.
  • a floc forming metal in the form of a compound of iron is introduced by means of a fluidic mixing unit into the pipeline at a position (not shown) upstream of or at the mixing unit A, while a precipitate-promoting additive such as a caustic solution, and/or other chemical reagents, is introduced at each of the mixing units A, B and D to establish a well-controlled pH profile through the cascade in order to achieve uniform and repeatable co-precipitation conditions.
  • the reagent flows into the mixer units are controlled by closed loop systems 20 sensing at points 22, 24 and 26 the pH of the liquor in the pipeline 14 so that the required pH profile can be maintained.
  • the bulk of the caustic required for neutralisation is introduced at the first mixer A and further smaller additions of caustic are made at subsequent mixers so that the pH of the liquor can be progressively adjusted to the pH range in which the iron has minimum solubility.
  • the seeding flow stream is introduced at a liquor pH value corresponding to the onset of precipitate nucleation and the position of introduction is chosen so that introduction takes place at a position along the cascade and hence on the pH profile which meets this condition.
  • the pH profile established may be such that this condition obtains at mixer C.
  • Introduction of the seeding flow stream upstream of C, that is at a lower pH than that at which onset of precipitate nucleation takes place tends to cause dissolution of the seeds, while introduction at a position downstream of C, that is at a pH higher than that at which onset of precipitate nucleation occurs, has a reduced effect since self-nucleation will have taken place before introduction of the seeding stream.
  • the waste stream contains plutonium in a concentration in the range 10 ⁇ 6 to 10 ⁇ 7 mol dm ⁇ 3 and iron (III) is added at a concentration of about 100 ppm.
  • iron (III) is added at a concentration of about 100 ppm.
  • the reduction in solubility arising from an increase in pH tends to produce a colloidal or polymeric precipitate which is difficult to remove.
  • iron (III) the plutonium colloid produced behaves as a substrate on which the iron (present at a higher concentration) can precipitate so that the colloidal plutonium particles become trapped within a ferric floc crystalline matrix producing a much larger particle which can be more readily separated from the aqueous phase.
  • the precipitate comprising thickened floc can, as well as or instead of being recycled as a seeding agent, be recycled from the phase separator, e.g. a thickening vessel or hydrocyclone unit, back to the first mixer A where, because the pH is relatively low, it redissolves to enhance the local iron (III) concentration. In this way the concentrations of iron (III) can be enhanced significantly, e.g. up to 500%, without increasing the feed iron (III) introduction rate. Also, by recycling precipitate in this way a greater proportion of the plutonium is incorporated within the floc crystalline matrix which is advantageous since the volume of precipitate requiring subsequent storage is reduced in comparison with the case where no iron (III) is recycled. In general where the precipitate is recycled for seeding purposes and for increasing iron (III) concentration, the proportion recycled for the latter purpose will usually be much greater than that recycled for seeding purposes.
  • the floc produced can be dissolved and the species separated from the floc forming metal by conventional chemical processes, such as dissolution followed by solvent extraction.
  • the separated floc-forming metal can then be recycled.
  • the floc-forming agent such as iron (III)
  • the floc-forming agent precipitates concurrently with, or after, the precipitation of the species being separated so that the ferric hydroxide floc derived from the floc-forming agent traps the precipitate arising from the species being separated. Therefore, it may be advantageous to add further floc-forming agent at mixing units downstream of the initial upstream addition of the floc-forming agent.
  • the reagent or reagents added to the liquor via the mixing units may be in gaseous form and not necessarily liquid form only.
  • the process may employ reactions resulting from the admixture of gases and liquids for producing a uranyl or plutonyl or uranyl/plutonyl precipitate which can be used to produce an oxide nuclear fuel. More specifically such a process may involve the mixture, within a cascaded fluidic device mixing arrangement as previously described, of a uranyl/plutonyl nitrite solution with gaseous ammonia and carbon dioxide at a pH between 8 and 9.
  • the useful product of the reaction is a complex ammonium uranyl/plutonyl carbonate precipitate which can be readily calcined to produce an oxide which may be free flowing and readily pressable.
  • the invention has applications in the chemical industry in general where processing of a liquor is required.
  • the invention may be used in the pharmaceutical industry in the precipitation of proteins, antibiotics and the oxygenation of shear-sensitive cell cultures; in the paint industry in the precipitation of pigments; in the manufacture of ceramics such as superconductors; and liquid-liquid mixing systems for the production, by chemical reaction, of chemicals such as polymers.
  • the invention may be employed in the minerals-processing industries for the recovery of valuable metal ions existing at low concentrations or to limit the environment impact of toxic heavy metal discharges.
  • the system may be operated with ion exchange materials added at the mixing units with subsequent recovery, regeneration and recycle of the ion exchange materials.

Description

  • This invention relates to chemical processes in which a bulk quantity of liquor is to be treated with one or more chemical reagents.
  • One form of treatment for which the invention has application is in the precipitation of solids from liquors such as waste liquors arising in the nuclear fuel reprocessing and water treatment industries.
  • The term 'liquor' is used herein to describe solutions, colloidal suspensions or combinations of the two.
  • A number of precipitation processes are employed by the nuclear industry as a means of decontaminating aqueous waste streams. The main contaminants are fission products and actinides. Similar processes are also employed by the water treatment industries for removal of heavy metal species.
  • The effectiveness of the precipitation process depends to a large extent on factors such as the type of chemical additive used to treat the waste liquor at the various pH stages, the degree of control employed during the pH conditioning of the liquor and the degree of mixing within the reaction zones. The effectiveness of the process also depends upon the degree of the solid/ liquid separation after the precipitation process is completed.
  • Presently most precipitation processes employed within the nuclear industry are usually operated in a batch manner using large stock tanks and large mechanically stirred reaction vessels often in the range 5-50m³ capacity.
  • The first stage separation of the solid precipitate from the aqueous phase is usually achieved by gravity settling in the same reaction vessel used to produce the precipitate. Control of pH in such large precipitate formation vessels may be difficult to achieve because after initial neutralisation to pH 1-2 further small additions of caustic solution (the usual neutralisation agent employed) can produce large changes in pH. Because the pH system is so inherently sensitive to caustic addition it is not inconceivable that large local variations in pH may exist within such tanks.
  • Such conditions caused by a combination of system sensitivity and poor mixing will produce a significant population of colloidal sized particulates and may produce undesirable chemical species such as soluble plutonium salts.
  • According to one aspect of the present invention there is provided apparatus for combining and mixing a bulk flow of liquor with at least one reagent for reaction with the liquor, said apparatus comprising a pipeline along which the liquor flows, at least one fluidic mixing device in the pipeline for combining the liquor with at least one reagent and thoroughly mixing the same, the combined liquor and reagent(s) thereafter continuing to flow along a pipeline section downstream of the or each fluidic device.
  • The pipeline section may be designed in terms of dimensions and flowrates to allow an appropriate reaction residence time before the bulk liquor flow encounters the next fluidic mixing device or enters a vessel for subsequent processing of the liquor.
  • According to a second aspect of the invention there is provided liquor-processing apparatus comprising a pipeline for conducting a bulk flow of liquor, at least one fluidic mixing device in the pipeline for combining the liquor with at least a precipitation-promoting reagent and thoroughly mixing the same, the or each fluidic mixing device being followed by a pipeline section affording a reaction residence time as the liquor and reagent(s) continue flowing along the pipeline, and means for effecting separation of the precipitate from the liquor.
  • Preferably the apparatus comprises a cascade of at least two fluidic mixing devices forming mixing junctions at spaced positions along the pipeline.
  • At least one of the fluidic mixing devices may be designed to admit simultaneously at least two streams of reagent flow along with the bulk liquor flow.
  • Conveniently a proportion of the precipitate derived in the course of separation by the separation means is recycled back to said pipeline for mixing with the bulk liquor flow via said fluidic mixing device or devices.
  • The separating means may comprise a settling or thickening vessel into which the mixed liquor and reagent(s), including any recycled precipitate, are fed from said pipeline whereby at least a proportion of the solids content tends to settle towards the base of the vessel, and the separating means preferably further comprises at least one centrifugal separator means (e.g. a hydrocyclone) for receiving from said settling vessel a proportion of the vessel contents to effect further separation of the solids and liquid phases, at least a fraction of the solids-bearing stream from the centrifugal separator means being recycled back to the pipeline as specified above. The flow rate of the recycled stream may be variable according to requirements.
  • The flow of the bulk liquor may be continuous and the transfer of liquor from the settling vessel to the centrifugal separator means may also be continuous. The sludge accumulating towards the base of the settling vessel may be intermittently or continuously withdrawn for subsequent processing, e.g. dewatering. In practice, intermittent withdrawal may be employed to enable the level of the vessel contents to be maintained between predetermined limits while liquor is continuously fed into the vessel from said pipeline and withdrawn from the vessel for transfer to the hydrocyclone(s).
  • The invention will now be described by way of example only with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
    • Figure 1 is a diagrammatic view of plant for processing waste liquor;
    • Figure 2 illustrates diagrammatically, in longitudinal section, one form of fluidic mixing device for use in the plant of Figure 1;
    • Figure 3 is a diagrammatic view, looking in the axial direction, showing the vortex chamber and inlets of the mixing device of Figure 2; and
    • Figure 4 is a diagrammatic view, in longitudinal section, of an alternative form of mixing device.
  • The waste liquor to be treated will be delivered via pipeline 10 to a buffer tank 12. The liquor within the buffer tank will then be transferred continuously along a pipeline 14 using a steam ejector 16 or a suitable fluidic pump unit (such as a double diode pump).
  • At a number of points on the pipeline (marked A, B, C and D on Figure 1) will be located mixing units. The mixing units will each be followed by a downstream section of pipework whose volume is calculated to give an appropriate reaction residence time. The system will approximate to a plug flow reactor with reactants being admitted at the mixing junctions. Such an arrangement serves to limit the degree of backmixing in the system and allows some reduction in the proportion of colloidal sized particles normally to be anticipated for a system with significant backmixing (such as a stirred tank reactor).
  • A precipitation-promoting additive, such as caustic solution, and/or other chemical reagents is introduced at each of the mixing units A, B, and D. The reagent flows into the mixer units are controlled by closed loop systems 20 sensing at points 22, 24, 26 a parameter such as pH. A single reagent stream or several reagent streams can converge at each mixing unit. The mixing unit may comprise either a Vortex type device as shown in Figures 2 and 3 or an entrainment type device as shown in Figure 3.
  • The treated liquor stream containing the precipitate formed by the chemical conditioning is then directed from the pipeline 14 into a thickening tank 30. Here the precipitate has an opportunity to settle to a thickened slurry. Located at the base of the tank is a reverse flow diverter pump unit 32 connected to an air piston 34 elevated above the maximum liquor level 36 in the tank. At intervals, which may be predetermined, the RFD pump 32 delivers a metered volume of thickened slurry via pipeline 38 to the next stage in the process, for example, a de-watering stage employing an ultra filter unit.
  • Also located in the thickening vessel at an elevation above the thickening zone is a steam ejector or a suitable fluidic pump unit 40. The pump 40 continuously delivers the precipitate-bearing solution to a hydrocyclone unit 42. The hydrocyclone unit 42 may comprise either a single hydrocyclone element or a multiplicity of elements connected in series or parallel as required.
  • The underflow liquor from the hydrocyclone unit containing the majority of the precipitated solids is then recycled, via a breakpot 44 and line 46, back to the mixer cascade (i.e. at mixer C in Figure 1) in order that it may act as a precipitate seeding solution. Such an operation may reduce the number of colloidal sized particles in solution. The seeding flow stream is desirably introduced at a liquor pH value corresponding to the onset of precipitate nucleation.
  • The overflow liquor from the hydrocyclone unit containing a reduced proportion of solid material is then transferred, via breakpot 48 and line 50, to the next stage in the process which could be a further chemical conditioning treatment using a cascade of fluidic mixers and hydrocyclone unit or it may be an ultrafiltration unit employed to polish the hydrocyclone overflow liquor before final discharge.
  • Such an intensified process will reduce the volume of the plant and the capital cost of the process units as well as allowing better control of the product quality. In addition there is the added advantage of low maintenance cost which is an inherent feature of the fluidic elements incorporated in the described system.
  • Referring to Figures 2 and 3, each mixer may be of the vortex type as shown in which the bulk liquor flow and the reagent(s) are fed tangentially via tangentially directed inlets 60 into a vortex chamber 62 in which they undergo thorough mixing before discharging as a mixture via centrally located outlet 64. Although in Figures 2 and 3 only two inlets 60 are illustrated there may be more than two depending on the number of reagents to be mixed with the bulk flow of liquor.
  • Figure 4 shows an entrainment-type mixer in which the bulk flow of liquor (fed in the direction 70) enters a Venturi-type constriction and the reagent or reagents to be mixed intensively with the bulk flow are introduced via inlets 72 which enter at the narrow waist section of the constriction where the flow velocity is increased thereby enhancing mixing of the reactants.
  • In one example of the above-described plant, where the waste liquor comprises a plutonium-bearing nitric acid liquor from which the plutonium is to be separated, a floc forming metal in the form of a compound of iron is introduced by means of a fluidic mixing unit into the pipeline at a position (not shown) upstream of or at the mixing unit A, while a precipitate-promoting additive such as a caustic solution, and/or other chemical reagents, is introduced at each of the mixing units A, B and D to establish a well-controlled pH profile through the cascade in order to achieve uniform and repeatable co-precipitation conditions. The reagent flows into the mixer units are controlled by closed loop systems 20 sensing at points 22, 24 and 26 the pH of the liquor in the pipeline 14 so that the required pH profile can be maintained. Usually, the bulk of the caustic required for neutralisation is introduced at the first mixer A and further smaller additions of caustic are made at subsequent mixers so that the pH of the liquor can be progressively adjusted to the pH range in which the iron has minimum solubility.
  • The seeding flow stream is introduced at a liquor pH value corresponding to the onset of precipitate nucleation and the position of introduction is chosen so that introduction takes place at a position along the cascade and hence on the pH profile which meets this condition. The pH profile established may be such that this condition obtains at mixer C. Introduction of the seeding flow stream upstream of C, that is at a lower pH than that at which onset of precipitate nucleation takes place tends to cause dissolution of the seeds, while introduction at a position downstream of C, that is at a pH higher than that at which onset of precipitate nucleation occurs, has a reduced effect since self-nucleation will have taken place before introduction of the seeding stream.
  • Many transition and heavy metals form solid phases as solution pH is increased, and in many instances the solubility of a metal in aqueous solution exhibits a relatively well defined minimum as pH is increased. In the case of iron over the pH range 5-12, solubility decreases towards a minimum value (10⁻⁸ mol dm⁻³) in the pH range 8-9, before solubility again increases with increasing alkalinity. Plutonium has a solubility less than that or iron (throughout the pH range 5-12). The theoretically predicted solubility vs pH curve for plutonium exhibits an extended plateau of minimum solubility over a pH range of about 7 to 11) whereas that for iron has a narrower range of minimum solubility centred on a pH of about 8.
  • Typically, the waste stream contains plutonium in a concentration in the range 10⁻⁶ to 10⁻⁷ mol dm⁻³ and iron (III) is added at a concentration of about 100 ppm. At such low concentrations of plutonium, the reduction in solubility arising from an increase in pH tends to produce a colloidal or polymeric precipitate which is difficult to remove. It is believed that in the presence of iron (III) the plutonium colloid produced behaves as a substrate on which the iron (present at a higher concentration) can precipitate so that the colloidal plutonium particles become trapped within a ferric floc crystalline matrix producing a much larger particle which can be more readily separated from the aqueous phase.
  • The precipitate comprising thickened floc can, as well as or instead of being recycled as a seeding agent, be recycled from the phase separator, e.g. a thickening vessel or hydrocyclone unit, back to the first mixer A where, because the pH is relatively low, it redissolves to enhance the local iron (III) concentration. In this way the concentrations of iron (III) can be enhanced significantly, e.g. up to 500%, without increasing the feed iron (III) introduction rate. Also, by recycling precipitate in this way a greater proportion of the plutonium is incorporated within the floc crystalline matrix which is advantageous since the volume of precipitate requiring subsequent storage is reduced in comparison with the case where no iron (III) is recycled. In general where the precipitate is recycled for seeding purposes and for increasing iron (III) concentration, the proportion recycled for the latter purpose will usually be much greater than that recycled for seeding purposes.
  • Where it is required that the species precipitated be recovered, the floc produced can be dissolved and the species separated from the floc forming metal by conventional chemical processes, such as dissolution followed by solvent extraction. The separated floc-forming metal can then be recycled.
  • It is desirable that the floc-forming agent, such as iron (III), precipitates concurrently with, or after, the precipitation of the species being separated so that the ferric hydroxide floc derived from the floc-forming agent traps the precipitate arising from the species being separated. Therefore, it may be advantageous to add further floc-forming agent at mixing units downstream of the initial upstream addition of the floc-forming agent.
  • For the avoidance of doubt, it is to be understood that the reagent or reagents added to the liquor via the mixing units may be in gaseous form and not necessarily liquid form only. For the example, the process may employ reactions resulting from the admixture of gases and liquids for producing a uranyl or plutonyl or uranyl/plutonyl precipitate which can be used to produce an oxide nuclear fuel. More specifically such a process may involve the mixture, within a cascaded fluidic device mixing arrangement as previously described, of a uranyl/plutonyl nitrite solution with gaseous ammonia and carbon dioxide at a pH between 8 and 9. The useful product of the reaction is a complex ammonium uranyl/plutonyl carbonate precipitate which can be readily calcined to produce an oxide which may be free flowing and readily pressable.
  • The invention has applications in the chemical industry in general where processing of a liquor is required. For example the invention may be used in the pharmaceutical industry in the precipitation of proteins, antibiotics and the oxygenation of shear-sensitive cell cultures; in the paint industry in the precipitation of pigments; in the manufacture of ceramics such as superconductors; and liquid-liquid mixing systems for the production, by chemical reaction, of chemicals such as polymers. Also, the invention may be employed in the minerals-processing industries for the recovery of valuable metal ions existing at low concentrations or to limit the environment impact of toxic heavy metal discharges.
  • For species that remain relatively soluble throughout the pH range, the system may be operated with ion exchange materials added at the mixing units with subsequent recovery, regeneration and recycle of the ion exchange materials.

Claims (18)

  1. A method of treating a liquor which comprises passing liquor along a pipeline, combining and thoroughly mixing a precipitate-promoting reagent with the liquor at least one position along the length of the pipeline using a fluidic mixing device, allowing the liquor to flow through a pipeline section disposed downstream of the or each mixing position to afford a reaction residence time, separating the resulting precipitate from the liquor and recycling back to the or at least one of the positions a portion of the precipitate for mixing with the liquor flow in the pipeline.
  2. A method as claimed in Claim 1 which comprises arranging a plurality of spaced positions along the length of the pipeline using a cascade of fluidic mixing devices.
  3. A method as claimed in Claim 1 or 2 which comprises passing the liquor continuously along the pipeline.
  4. A method as claimed in Claim 1, 2 or 3 which comprises feeding the mixed liquor and reagent, including recycled precipitate, into a settling vessel where at least a proportion of the solids contents tends to settle towards the base of the vessel and feeding a portion of the contents to a centrifugal separator means.
  5. A method as claimed in any one of Claims 1 to 4 in which the precipitate promoting reagent comprises a caustic solution.
  6. A method as claimed in any one of the preceding claims in which the introduction of the precipitate-promoting or other reagent into the pipeline is controlled in dependence upon pH sensed within the pipeline.
  7. A method as claimed in any one of Claims 1 to 6 in which the liquor contains heavy metals and said heavy metals are precipitated from the liquor by said precipitation-promoting reagent.
  8. A method as claimed in any one of Claims 1 to 7 in which a uranyl/plutonyl nitrate solution is mixed with gaseous ammonia and carbon dioxide at a pH between 8 and 9.
  9. A method as claimed in Claim 1 in which there is a cascade of said mixing devices located at spaced positions along the pipeline, and a pH adjusting reagent is introduced at selected ones or all of said mixing devices to establish a well-defined pH profile along the cascade.
  10. A method as claimed in Claim 9 in which the liquor contains a floc-forming agent and a species which is to be separated from the liquor with the aid of the floc-forming agent, said pH adjusting reagent being added in stages at said mixing devices to create pH conditions in which the floc-forming agent and said species precipitate whereby the resulting floc captures at least part of the precipitate obtained from said species.
  11. A method as claimed in Claim 10 in which the precipitate comprising said floc and said species is separated from the liquor and recycled to at least one mixing position of the cascade.
  12. A method as claimed in Claim 11 in which at least a proportion of said recycled floc/species precipitate is introduced at a mixing position where the prevailing pH is such that the recycled precipitate re-dissolves in the liquor to increase the concentration of said floc-forming agent.
  13. A method as claimed in Claim 11 or 12 in which at least a proportion of said recycled floc/species precipitate is introduced at a mixing position where the prevailing pH allows the recycled precipitate to act as nuclei to promote precipitation from the liquor.
  14. An apparatus for carrying out a method of treating a liquor according to Claim 1 comprising a pipeline (14) at least one mixing point (A, B, C and D) at which a precipitation-promoting reagent can be added to and thoroughly mixed with the said liquor by means of a fluidic-mixing device (60, 62 or 70, 72), means for maintaining the liquor and reagent in contact for a period of time sufficient to allow reaction between the liquor and reagent to occur, means (30, 40, 42) for separating precipitate from the treated liquor and means (44, 46) for recycling a portion of the precipitate back to one of the mixing device points for incorporation into the liquor.
  15. An apparatus according to Claim 14 wherein the means for separating precipitated material from the liquor comprises a settling vessel (30), a pump (40) and a centrifugal separator (42).
  16. An apparatus according to Claim 15 wherein the means for recycling a portion of the precipitate back to the mixing point comprises a breakpot (44) at the outlet from the centrifugal separator (42) and a conduit (46) connecting the breakpot (44) to a mixing point (C).
  17. Apparatus according to any of claims 14 to 16 including a plurality of mixing points (A, B, C and D) arranged in cascade.
  18. Apparatus according to Claim 17 including means (20) for sensing the pH of the liquor at a plurality of positions along the pipeline (14) and means for supplying reagent to mixing devices at one or more of the mixing points (A, B, or D) to maintain a predetermined pH profile in the liquor flowing through the pipeline 14.
EP19870310701 1986-12-08 1987-12-04 Chemical treatment of liquors Expired - Lifetime EP0277422B1 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB868629320A GB8629320D0 (en) 1986-12-08 1986-12-08 Chemical treatment of liquors
GB8629320 1986-12-08
GB8706529 1987-03-19
GB878706529A GB8706529D0 (en) 1986-12-08 1987-03-19 Chemical treatment of liquids

Publications (3)

Publication Number Publication Date
EP0277422A2 EP0277422A2 (en) 1988-08-10
EP0277422A3 EP0277422A3 (en) 1990-02-14
EP0277422B1 true EP0277422B1 (en) 1994-11-09

Family

ID=26291666

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
EP19870310701 Expired - Lifetime EP0277422B1 (en) 1986-12-08 1987-12-04 Chemical treatment of liquors

Country Status (3)

Country Link
EP (1) EP0277422B1 (en)
DE (1) DE3750747T2 (en)
GB (1) GB2200574B (en)

Families Citing this family (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB9007027D0 (en) * 1990-03-29 1990-05-30 Atomic Energy Authority Uk Precipitation apparatus and method
DE4307468B4 (en) * 1993-03-10 2007-09-20 Wismut Gmbh Process for the precipitation of heavy metals, uranium and toxic metals in the rehabilitation of mining facilities, in particular contaminated waters
GB2341120B (en) * 1998-09-04 2002-04-17 Aea Technology Plc Controlling uniformity of crystalline precipitates

Family Cites Families (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB1175514A (en) * 1966-03-11 1969-12-23 Kodak Ltd Process and Apparatus for Mixing or Reacting Fluids
GB1237229A (en) * 1968-12-30 1971-06-30 Swift & Co Improvements in or relating to fertilizers
JPS5238505B2 (en) * 1973-02-02 1977-09-29
JPS5390219A (en) * 1977-01-17 1978-08-08 Kao Corp Sulfonation process and its apparatus
DE2719956C2 (en) * 1977-05-04 1982-12-02 Bayer Ag, 5090 Leverkusen Device for mixing, reacting and evaporation
CA1137076A (en) * 1978-12-13 1982-12-07 John R. Bauer Fluid spray mixer - reactor system

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB2200574A (en) 1988-08-10
DE3750747T2 (en) 1995-03-16
GB8728387D0 (en) 1988-02-10
DE3750747D1 (en) 1994-12-15
EP0277422A3 (en) 1990-02-14
GB2200574B (en) 1990-11-28
EP0277422A2 (en) 1988-08-10

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US4252776A (en) Aluminum dross processing
US20140034560A1 (en) Solid separation system
JPH0386287A (en) Method and device for washing granular resin
CN212597897U (en) Flying dust washing processing system
US3393055A (en) Precipitation processes
US3300402A (en) Purification of putrescible unstable wastes
EP0277422B1 (en) Chemical treatment of liquors
US3409545A (en) Waste treatment process and process and apparatus for recovering lime
US5219533A (en) Apparatus for solvent extraction process
CA1082883A (en) Method for removing ferrous iron from alkali metal aluminate liquor
US4394363A (en) Process for the granulation of precipitation products formed from ammonium compounds
CN112499813A (en) Production method for full resource recycling of waste water in titanium dioxide production by sulfuric acid process
US4320098A (en) Aluminum sulfate manufacture from aluminum dross tailings
US11459637B2 (en) System and method for processing of minerals containing the lanthanide series and production of rare earth oxides
JPS63197542A (en) Chemical treatment of liquid
US4495087A (en) Preparation of aluminum hydroxycarbonate gels by a continuous process
US3247105A (en) Process and apparatus for producing dense sludges
US20210070627A1 (en) System and method for processing of minerals containing the lanthanide series and production of rare earth oxides
US3271117A (en) Apparatus for recovery of magnesium values
CN213475435U (en) A processing apparatus that is arranged in pyrite system acid dilute sulphuric acid
CN112334415B (en) For using CO 2 Method for treating industrial effluent containing aluminum
EP0113493B1 (en) Aluminium hydroxycarbonate gel
CN115522081B (en) Method for preparing uranium oxide product from alkaline uranium qualified liquid
CN209367995U (en) Integrated decleaning tank
US3185661A (en) Particle agitation system

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
PUAI Public reference made under article 153(3) epc to a published international application that has entered the european phase

Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: 0009012

AK Designated contracting states

Kind code of ref document: A2

Designated state(s): CH DE FR IT LI NL

PUAL Search report despatched

Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: 0009013

AK Designated contracting states

Kind code of ref document: A3

Designated state(s): CH DE FR IT LI NL

17P Request for examination filed

Effective date: 19900803

RAP1 Party data changed (applicant data changed or rights of an application transferred)

Owner name: UNITED KINGDOM ATOMIC ENERGY AUTHORITY

17Q First examination report despatched

Effective date: 19930514

GRAA (expected) grant

Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: 0009210

AK Designated contracting states

Kind code of ref document: B1

Designated state(s): CH DE FR IT LI NL

PG25 Lapsed in a contracting state [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo]

Ref country code: NL

Effective date: 19941109

Ref country code: LI

Effective date: 19941109

Ref country code: CH

Effective date: 19941109

PGFP Annual fee paid to national office [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo]

Ref country code: FR

Payment date: 19941114

Year of fee payment: 8

Ref country code: DE

Payment date: 19941114

Year of fee payment: 8

ITF It: translation for a ep patent filed

Owner name: JACOBACCI CASETTA & PERANI S.P.A.

ET Fr: translation filed
REF Corresponds to:

Ref document number: 3750747

Country of ref document: DE

Date of ref document: 19941215

REG Reference to a national code

Ref country code: CH

Ref legal event code: PL

NLV1 Nl: lapsed or annulled due to failure to fulfill the requirements of art. 29p and 29m of the patents act
PLBE No opposition filed within time limit

Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: 0009261

STAA Information on the status of an ep patent application or granted ep patent

Free format text: STATUS: NO OPPOSITION FILED WITHIN TIME LIMIT

26N No opposition filed
PG25 Lapsed in a contracting state [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo]

Ref country code: FR

Effective date: 19960830

PG25 Lapsed in a contracting state [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo]

Ref country code: DE

Effective date: 19960903

REG Reference to a national code

Ref country code: FR

Ref legal event code: ST

PG25 Lapsed in a contracting state [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo]

Ref country code: IT

Free format text: LAPSE BECAUSE OF NON-PAYMENT OF DUE FEES

Effective date: 20051204