GB1567841A - Production of anhydrous chromic chloride - Google Patents

Production of anhydrous chromic chloride Download PDF

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Publication number
GB1567841A
GB1567841A GB2325077A GB2325077A GB1567841A GB 1567841 A GB1567841 A GB 1567841A GB 2325077 A GB2325077 A GB 2325077A GB 2325077 A GB2325077 A GB 2325077A GB 1567841 A GB1567841 A GB 1567841A
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chromic
product
anhydrous
chloridising
oxide hydrate
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GB2325077A
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National Research Development Corp UK
National Research Development Corp of India
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National Research Development Corp UK
National Research Development Corp of India
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Priority to GB2325077A priority Critical patent/GB1567841A/en
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    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C01INORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C01GCOMPOUNDS CONTAINING METALS NOT COVERED BY SUBCLASSES C01D OR C01F
    • C01G37/00Compounds of chromium
    • C01G37/04Chromium halides

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  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Organic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Inorganic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Inorganic Compounds Of Heavy Metals (AREA)

Description

(54) PRODUCTION OF ANHYDROUS CHROMIC CHLORIDE (71) We, NATIONAL RESEARCH DEVEL OPMENT CORPORATION, British corporation established by Statute, of Kingsgate House, 6674 Victoria Street, London S.W.1., do hereby declare the invention, for which we pray that a patent may be granted to us, and the method by which it is to be performed, to be particularly described in and by the following This invention is concerned with the production of anhydrous chromic chloride.
Anhydrous chromic choloride, CrCl3, is a substantially water insoluble, violet compound wiud' is readily reduced with hydrogren to form chromous choloride, CrCl2, and chrombun sponge, this reduction being the basis of a chromising process.
It is lcnown to produce chromic choloride by the cholorination of chromic oxide with chlorine oxide with cholorine in the presence of carbon or with carbon tetracholoride at temperatures substantially in excess of 600"C. Because of the highly corrosive nature of the reactants at such temperatures, the reaction must be carnod out in equipment made of suitably corrosion-resistant material, such as graphite, fused silica, or high purity alumina; conventional metallic equipment made, for example, of stainless steel, cannot be used. In addition, the produce has to be purified by sublimation, if desired in a stream of dry cholorine gas, and condenses as a voluminous mass of micaceous crystals that are difficult to handle.
We have now developed an improved process for the preparation of anhydrous chromic chloride which can be carried out at temperatures below 600"C, which can be carried out in reaction equipment formed of certain metals, which does not require sublimation of the product to purify it, and which gives a product having a bulk density such that the product can be easily handled.
According to the present invention, there is provided a process for the preparation of anhydrous chromic choloride, which comprises choloridising chromic oxide hydrate, Cr2 03.
xH2 0, with a vapour or gas phase chloridising agent at an elevated temperature which is below the glow temperature (at which anhydrous chromic oxide recrystallises) and then cooling the anhydrous chromic chloride obtained in a non-oxidising atmosphere.
Suitable choloridising agents are, for example, carbon tetracholoride vapour; other gaseous or vaporised chlorohydrocarbons; mixtures of carbon monoxide and chlorine; phosgene; and mixtures of carbon monoxide and vaporised chlorohydrocarbons, of which the first, carbon tetracholoride vapour, is preferred.
The chloridising agent is preferably used in admixture with an inert gas, such as nitrogen.
The reaction is preferably carried out at a temperature below 600 C; when such temperatures are used, reaction equipment made from nickel and high nickel alloys can be used. Preferred reaction temperatures are from 360" to 5270C, the most preferred temperatures being from 4300 to 500 C.
At temperatures below the glow temperature, the product, CrCl3, does not sublime. At the same time the product is obtained in a sufficiently high purity not to need sublimation for the purpose of purification. The product obtained has a relatively high bulk density (substantially greater than the product obtained by volatilisation) and can be readily handled; it is suitable for use in the chromising process.
The chloridising reaction can be carried out in any suitable type of equipment for carrying out solid/gas heterogenous phase reactions, for example a screwconveyor type of reactor, a re circulating pneumatic reactor or a fluidised bed reactor. When carbon tetrachloride vapour is used as the chloridising agent, it can be condensed from the gases exiting from the reactor and recycled; hydrogen chloride, a product of the reaction (see below) can be recovered from the off-gases by scrubbing the latter with water.
Using the preferred chloridising agent, carbon tetrachloride, a typical stoichiometric equation for the reaction is as follows: 2Cr203.3lkH20 (amorph.) + 61ACC14(g) = 4CrC1 3(C) + 61/2C02(g) + l4HCl(g) When a mixture of carbon tetrachloride vapour and an inert gas, such as nitrogen, is used, the partial pressure of the carbon tetrachloride vapour is preferably from 90 to 212 mm Hg, more preferably about 90 mm Hg.The reaction rate is proportional to the space velocity of the gaseous reagent for space velocities up to about 170 mm/min at S.T.P. and is substantially independent of the space velocity at values of the latter from 170 to 284 mmímin at S.T.P.; it is preferred to use a space velocity of 170 to 284 mm/min at S.T.P., more preferably the lower end of this range.
The anhydrous chromic chloride product should be cooled in a non-oxidising atmos-, phere, preferably to a temperature below about 200"C. The bulk density of the final product is typically 0.75 g/cm3 (poured) and 1.05 g/cm3 (tapped). The product may be obtained in a sintered form, in which case grinding of the product may be desirable or necessary.
The chromic oxide hydrate used as the starting material is preferably obtained as follows.
An aqueous solution of sodium chromate or dichromate is reduced to form a solution of a Cr III salt. This reduction can be effected, for example, with hydrochloric acid and methanol, preferably but not necessarily, at about 70"C, according to the equation: 2Na2 Cr04(aq) + CH3 OH(aq) + 1 0HC 1 (aq) + H20(1) = 2 [Cr(H2 0)4 .C12 ] C1 (aq) + 4NaCl (aq) + CO2(g).
This reaction is exothermic. Other reductants which can be used in place of methanol are, for example, ethanol, starch, cellulose, lignin, sugar, molasses, formic acid, sodium formate, acetic acid, ethylene glycol, sawdust, wood shavings, wood chips, paper waste, cotton waste, and lignite.
The Cr III salt solution obtained is neutralised, for example with magnesia or ammonia, to precipitate chromic oxide hydrate. Magnesia is preferably used in the form of an aqueous slurry of light magnesia or regenerated magnesia. The chromic oxide hydrate is separated and washing using, for example, a rotary drum vacuum filter, dried, for example in air at 11 00C, and crushed, if necessary, to a suitably small particle size to facilitate the solid/gas heterogenous phase chloridising reaction. The chromic oxide hydrate is preferably such as to pass through a 36 B.S. mesh screen.
If desired, the dried chromic oxide hydrate may be dehydrated further prior to chloridisation, by being heated to a temperature below the glow temperature, preferably the chloridising temperature. Such dehydration may be carried out in any suitable environment, preferably non-oxidising, for example in a stream of a nonreactive gas or vapour, such as nitrogen, hydrogen or carbon monoxide, or in vacuo. Dehydration in a stream of nitrogen is preferred. The dehydrated product thus obtained is preferably not annealed prior to its being chloridised.
In order that the invention may be more fully understood, the following examples are given by way of illustration only: Example 1 12 g of methanol were mixed with 0.86 1 of a solution of 130 gll of anhydrous sodium chromate in 219 g/l aqueous hydrocholoric acid and allowed to react to completion. The aqueous chromic chloride solution thus obtained was heated to 80 C. Chromic oxide hydrate was precipitated at pH 6.85 by the addition, with gentle agitation, of 75.6 g of light magnesia in the form of a 10% w/v aqueous slurry.
(There was no loss of chromium at this stage.) The precipitated chromic oxide hydrate was filtered at 450C, washed with 11 of water and dried in air for 5 hours at 110 C (loss on drying: 75.5%;loss on ignition at about 7000C: 67.5it). The filtrate, 1.211, contained 24 gll Na, 26.7 g/l Mg and 6 mg/l Cr;the wash liquor, 1.06 1, contained 1.7 g/1 Na, 11.7 g/l Mg and 0.6 1 Cr. (chromium recovery at this stage exceeded 99%).The dried chromic oxide hydrate was crushed and brushed through a 36 B.S. mesh screen. 1 g of the screenings was evenly distributed over the bottom of a silica boat (90 mm long x 16 mm wide x 13 mm deep), placed in a 28 mm diameter horizontal silica tubular reactor through which nitrogen gas was passed (space velocity: 254 mm/min at S.T.P.) and heated to 5000C and annealed for 1 hour. Carbon tetracholoride vapour (partial pressure: 83 mm Hg) was then mixed with the nitrogen gas and passed over the chromic oxide bydrate for a further period of 1 hour at 500 C.
The chloridised product was cooled to ambient temperature in the stream of nitrogen gas.
It exhibited the X-ray powder diffraction pattern and the diffuse reflectance spectrum of anhydrous chromic chloride. Furthermore, it was essentially insoluble in hot and cold dilute solutions of alkalis and hot and cold mineral acids, but dissolved rapidly and completely in dilute hydrochloric acid in the presence of zinc. The anhydrous chromic chloride product contained chlorine and chromium in a molar ratio of 3.14 : 1, the overall recovery of chromium was 98%.
Example 2 0.23 1 of a gently agitated 337 gll aqueous solution of chromic chloride hexahydrate, CrC13 .6H20, was neutralised with 35% ammonia solution. The chromic oxide hydrate thus precipitated was filtered, washed with 0.2 1 of water, re-pulped with 0.2 1 of water and refiltered thrice, and dried in air for 3 hours at 1100C. The dried chromic oxide hydrate contained 34.2% Cr and 5.35% C1 (loss on ignition at about 700 C: 46hSo).
The dried material was crushed and brushed through a 36 B.S. mesh screen. 1 g of the screenings was distributed evenly over the bottom of a silica boat (90 mm long x 16 mm wide x 13 mm deep), placed in a 28 mm diameter horizontal silica tubular reactor and heated to 4300C in a stream of nitrogen gas (space velocity: 156 mm/min at S.T.P.). Carbon tetrachloride vapour (partial pressure: 87 mm Hg) was introduced into the gas stream and passed over the chromic hydrate for 1 hour at 430 C.
Chloridisation of the chromic oxide hydrate then occurred in accordance with the following stoichiometric equation: 2Cr203 .21120 (amorph.) + 5% CCl4(g) = 4 CrCl 3 (C) + 5 CO2(g) + 10 HCl (g) Small amounts of carbon monoxide and chlorine were also evolved.
The product obtained was cooled to ambient temperature in the stream of nitrogen gas. The product was non-hygroscopic and exhibited the X-ray powder diffraction pattern, the infra-red absorption spectrum and the diffuse reflectance spectrum of anhydrous chromic chloride. It was essentially insoluble in hot and cold solutions of alkalis and hot and cold mineral acids, but dissolved readily and completely in dilute hydrochloric acid in the presence of zinc. The anhydrous chromic chloride product contained chlorine and chromium in a molar ratio of 2.98 :1; the overall recovery of chromium was 98.52.
WHAT WE CLAIM IS: 1. A process for the preparation of anhydrous chromic chloride, which comprises chloridising chromic oxide hydrate with a vapour or gas phase chloridising agent at an elevated temperature which is below the glow temperature and then cooling the anhydrous chromic chloride obtained in a nonsxidising atmosphere.
2. A process according to claim I, in which the chloridising agent is carbon tetrachloride vapour.
3. A process according to claim 1 or 2, in which the chloridising agent is used in admixture with an inert gas.
4. A process according to claim 3, in which the inert gas is nitrogen.
5. A process according to any of claims 1 to 4, in which the reaction is carried out at a temperature below 6000 C.
6. A process according to any of claims 1 to 4, in which the reaction is carried out at a temperature of from 360" to 5270C.
7. A process according to any of claims 1 to 4, in which the reaction is carried out at a temperature of from 430" to 5000 C.
8. A process according to any of claims 1 to 7, in which chloridising is effected with a mixture of carbon tetrachloride and an inert gas and the partial pressure of the carbon tetrachloride vapour is from 90 to 212 mm Hg.
9. A process according to any of claims 1 to 8, in which a stream of the chloridising agent is passed relative to the chromic oxide hydrate, the space velocity of the chloridising agent being from 170 to 284 mm/min at S.T.P.
10. A process according to any of claims 1 to 9, in which the chromic oxide hydrate starting material is prepared by reducing an aqueous solution of sodium chromate or dichromate to form a solution of a Cr III salt, neutralising the latter solution to precipitate chromic oxide hydrate, and separating, washing and drying the latter.
11. A process according to any of claims 1 to 10, in which the chromic oxide hydrate is dehydrated prior to chloridisation by being heated to a temperature below the glow temperature.
12. A process according to claim 11, in which such heating is effected in the presence of a stream of a non-reactive gas or vapour.
13. A process for the preparation of anhydrous chromic chloride substantially as herein described in either of the Examples.
14. Anhydrous chromic chloride when prepared by the process claimed in any of the pre

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GB2325077A 1978-04-20 1978-04-20 Production of anhydrous chromic chloride Expired GB1567841A (en)

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Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US7658894B2 (en) 2003-02-06 2010-02-09 Ressources Minieres Pro-Or Inc. Method for increasing the chrome to iron ratio of chromites products

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US7658894B2 (en) 2003-02-06 2010-02-09 Ressources Minieres Pro-Or Inc. Method for increasing the chrome to iron ratio of chromites products

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