NL2008357C2 - Process for producing sodium bicarbonate. - Google Patents
Process for producing sodium bicarbonate. Download PDFInfo
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- NL2008357C2 NL2008357C2 NL2008357A NL2008357A NL2008357C2 NL 2008357 C2 NL2008357 C2 NL 2008357C2 NL 2008357 A NL2008357 A NL 2008357A NL 2008357 A NL2008357 A NL 2008357A NL 2008357 C2 NL2008357 C2 NL 2008357C2
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- sodium carbonate
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C01—INORGANIC CHEMISTRY
- C01D—COMPOUNDS OF ALKALI METALS, i.e. LITHIUM, SODIUM, POTASSIUM, RUBIDIUM, CAESIUM, OR FRANCIUM
- C01D7/00—Carbonates of sodium, potassium or alkali metals in general
- C01D7/10—Preparation of bicarbonates from carbonates
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C01—INORGANIC CHEMISTRY
- C01D—COMPOUNDS OF ALKALI METALS, i.e. LITHIUM, SODIUM, POTASSIUM, RUBIDIUM, CAESIUM, OR FRANCIUM
- C01D7/00—Carbonates of sodium, potassium or alkali metals in general
- C01D7/12—Preparation of carbonates from bicarbonates or bicarbonate-containing product
- C01D7/126—Multi-step processes, e.g. from trona to soda ash
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C01—INORGANIC CHEMISTRY
- C01D—COMPOUNDS OF ALKALI METALS, i.e. LITHIUM, SODIUM, POTASSIUM, RUBIDIUM, CAESIUM, OR FRANCIUM
- C01D7/00—Carbonates of sodium, potassium or alkali metals in general
- C01D7/22—Purification
- C01D7/24—Crystallisation
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- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
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- Inorganic Chemistry (AREA)
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Abstract
Producing sodium bicarbonate from a sodium carbonate-containing first stream, comprises: (a) mixing the sodium carbonate-containing first stream with at least second stream portion for producing a flow; (b) bicarbonizing the flow with gas comprising carbon dioxide for preparing an aqueous suspension containing crystals; (c) separating aqueous suspension to obtain crystals; (d) partially decarbonizing the aqueous mother liquor and removing a portion of water; (e) recycling at least second stream portion from the step (a); and (f) removing the remaining flow or a part of aqueous mother liquor. Producing sodium bicarbonate from a sodium carbonate-containing first stream, where a sodium carbonate-containing first stream portion is generated from a sodium crystallizer, and the sodium carbonate-containing first stream comprises at least 2 wt.%, preferably at least 4 wt.% of sodium chloride and/or sodium sulfate, comprises: (a) mixing the sodium carbonate-containing stream with at least second stream portion for producing a flow; (b) bicarbonizing the flow with a gas comprising carbon dioxide for preparing an aqueous suspension containing crystals, where the crystals include sodium bicarbonate crystals; (c) separating the aqueous suspension to obtain crystals, at least one part comprising sodium bicarbonate crystals and an aqueous mother liquor; (d) partially debicarbonizing the aqueous mother liquor and removing a portion of the water to obtain the flow and an optionally gas; (e) recycling at least second stream portion from the step (a); and (f) removing the remaining flow or a part of the aqueous mother liquor for further processing. An independent claim is also included for joint production of sodium carbonate and sodium bicarbonate crystals, comprising introducing sodium carbonate solution comprising sodium carbonate and at least one impurity of sodium chloride and/or sodium sulfate in a sodium carbonate-crystallizer, forming a first aqueous suspension comprising sodium carbonate-crystals, subjecting the aqueous suspension to a first separation to obtain crystals including sodium carbonate and mother liquor. A portion of the mother liquor is withdrawn from the sodium carbonate-crystallizer to form the sodium carbonate-containing first stream, which is further processed for producing sodium bicarbonate.
Description
- 1 -
Process for producing sodium bicarbonate FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The invention relates to a process for producing sodium bicarbonate from a sodium carbonate bearing stream, a part of which is generated by a sodium carbonate crystallizer, such sodium carbonate bearing stream comprising sodium 5 carbonate and a water-soluble impurity, while minimizing a final volume of a purge necessary when producing the sodium carbonate, and also minimizing the loss of sodium carbonate associated with such purge.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Sodium carbonate (Na2C03), or soda ash, is one of the largest volume 10 alkali commodities made world wide with a total production in 2008 of 48 million tons. Sodium carbonate finds major use in the glass, chemicals, detergents industries, and also in the sodium bicarbonate production industry.
The main processes for sodium carbonate production are the Solvay ammonia synthetic process, the ammonium chloride process, and the trona-based 15 processes.
Trona ore is a mineral that contains up to 99% sodium sesquicarbonate (Na2CO3.NaHCO3.2H2O). Trona-based soda ash is obtained from trona ore deposits in Green River (Wyoming), Turkey, China, and Kenya either by conventional underground mining techniques, by solution mining or lake waters 20 processing. The trona-based sodium carbonate from Wyoming comprised about 90 % of the total U.S. soda ash production.
A typical analysis of the trona ore in Green River is as follows: TABLE 1
Constituent _Weight Percent_ _Na2CQ3__43A_ _NaHCQ3__34A_ H2O (crystalline and free moisture) _15,4_ _NaCl__O01_ _Na2SQ4__O01_
Fe203 _0.14_ _Insolubles__63_ _Organics__(X3_ -2-
Trona deposits contain highly diverse soluble impurities such as alkaline metal halides (sodium chloride, potassium chloride, sodium fluoride,...), alkaline metal sulfates (sodium sulfate, potassium sulfate,. . .), alkaline metal nitrate (sodium sulfate, potassium sulfate,. . .), alkaline metal borate, alkaline metal 5 phosphates, etc.... Those highly soluble impurities are in various proportions according the geographic location of the deposits. In particular, sodium chloride and sodium sulfate may represents several percents or several tens percents of trona ore according the geographic location.
Trona deposits also include slightly soluble mineral or organic impurities. 10 Examples of slightly soluble mineral are: alkali metal and alkali earth metal silicates, aluminates, titanates, vanadates, metallic compounds and salts. The organic impurities come from organic sediments that were captured during the formation of the deposits and that frequently have formed oil shales during geological aging. Both mineral and organic soluble impurities may also be 15 partially generated during the trona processing in the mine or on surface operations. In particular thermal treatments, such as calcination, generally amplify the quantity of some soluble impurities such as sodium silicates, and sodium salts of organic compounds by thermal saponification.
Other “insoluble” or very slightly water-soluble mineral impurities found 20 in trona or adjacent to trona deposits are generally mixtures of different minerals, the most frequent of which are calcite, dolomite, pirssonite, zeolite, feldspar, clay minerals, iron /aluminium silicates, and calcium sulfate.
Two main techniques well known in the art are used to recover trona ore from trona ore deposits. The first technique is a mechanical mining, also called 25 conventional mining, such as a room and pillar panel operation or a longwall operation. The second technique is a solution mining recovering wherein trona is dissolved with water and recovered as a solution.
Among the several ways in which sodium carbonate can be recovered from trona ore that contains other salts and impurities, the most widely practiced is the 30 so called “monohydrate process”. In that process a mined trona ore is crushed, then calcined into crude sodium carbonate, then leached with water, the resulting water solution is purified and fed to a crystallizer where pure sodium carbonate monohydrate crystals are crystallized. The monohydrate crystals are separated from the mother liquor and then dried into anhydrous sodium carbonate. Most of 35 the mother liquor is recycled into the crystallizer. However, the soluble impurities contained in the trona ore, tend to accumulate into the crystallizer. To - 3 - avoid build up of impurities, the mother liquor must be purged. The purge liquor, which represents important quantities for industrial monohydrate plants, is commonly sent to an evaporative pond, also called tailings pond. The significant quantity of alkali which is contained in the purge liquor is consequently lost.
5 Moreover, the stocking of large quantities of purge liquors in evaporative ponds raise environmental problems, because of the scarce availability of new areas for stocking.
Variants to produce sodium carbonate from trona ore, in particular when solution mining is used, is: 10 - either crystallizing refined sodium sesquicarbonate (sesqui) after evaporation of water, then calcining the sodium sesqui into soda ash; or alternatively decomposing thermally (with steam) or calcine chemically (with caustic soda) the dissolved sodium bicarbonate to transform it into dissolved sodium carbonate, then evaporating the water in order to 15 crystallize pure sodium carbonate monohydrate.
In those variants, the soluble impurities contained in the trona ore, tend to accumulate also into the sesqui or the monohydrate crystallizers. To avoid the build up of impurities, the mother liquors must also be purged, raising the same environmental problems in evaporative ponds as the monohydrate process.
20 Sodium bicarbonate (NaHCCb), aside sodium carbonate, is another important alkali product with a wide range of applications including human food, animal feed, flue gas treatment, and chemical industries. The production of sodium bicarbonate is currently almost entirely made by the carbonation of solid or aqueous solutions of sodium carbonate with gaseous CO2 either produced in 25 situ in the soda ash plants or purchased independently.
Several technical alternatives have been proposed to reduce the purge volume from soda ash plants.
US2003/0143149 discloses a process for recovering sodium-based chemicals from sodium carbonate streams such as recycle, purge, and waste 30 streams from sodium carbonate crystallizers, mine water, evaporative pond water and sodium carbonate decahydrate deposits. The sodium bicarbonate from those streams is partially destroyed by a decarbonization and the resulting stream is fed mainly back to a sodium carbonate monohydrate crystallizer, and the remainder of the resulting decarbonized stream is fed to a sodium carbonate decahydrate 35 crystallizer, from which purified decahydrate is recovered and recycled to monohydrate crystallizer and a purge concentrated in impurity such as sodium -4- sulfate is disposed off. Though the purge reduction factor of this process is limited because, when high concentration of impurities is reached, sodium carbonate and sodium sulfate forms decahydrated mixed salts. And if high amounts of sodium sulfate are recycled back to carbonate monohydrate 5 crystallizer, they generate burkeite crystals (Na2C03.2Na2S04) that are detrimental to sodium carbonate monohydrate quality.
US2004/0057892 discloses a process for the production of sodium carbonate and bicarbonate, according to a purge liquor from a monohydrate sodium carbonate crystallizer is introduced into a sodium carbonate decahydrate 10 crystallizer and the purified decahydrate crystals are converted into sodium bicarbonate. It has been observed that this process is not efficient when the purge liquor, depending on the trona source, contains high levels of impurities. High levels of sodium chloride in the purge liquor prevents smooth crystallisation of sodium carbonate decahydrate.
15 US2926995 discloses a process for producing sodium bicarbonate crystals from sodium carbonate solutions containing sodium chloride from electrolytic caustic soda-chlorine cells.
US7507388 discloses a process for the production of sodium carbonate and bicarbonate, from a pre-purified solution comprising bicarbonate which is first 20 partially decarbonized and then used in both a sodium bicarbonate line and a sodium carbonate monohydrate line. The purge stream of the sodium carbonate monohydrate crystallizer is either sent into a mixed sodium carbonate decahydrate and sodium sesquicarbonate line wherein resulting filtrate is discarded as the final purge of the process or sent after dilution into a light soda 25 ash line comprising an intermediate sodium bicarbonate carbonation step, the bicarbonate is separated from the filtrate, and this filtrate is also disposed as a final purge. The taught total amounts of generated purges is very high (1.28 t of purges per ton of dense soda ash) and corresponds to 6 to 15 weight percents of purged sodium carbonate per ton of produced dense soda ash.
30 US2009/0291038 (Solvay) discloses a process for the joint production of sodium carbonate and sodium bicarbonate crystals, according to which a solid powder derived from sodium sesquicarbonate such as calcined trona is dissolved in water, the resulting water solution is introduced into a crystallizer, wherein sodium carbonate crystals and a mother liquor are produced, part of the mother 35 liquor is taken out of the crystallizer (purge of the sodium carbonate crystallizer) and is carbonized (carbonated) to produce valuable sodium bicarbonate crystals -5- and a second mother liquor, the second mother liquor is optionally decarbonized (debicarbonated) and then sent to a storage pond. In this document, it is taught that the mother liquor used for sodium bicarbonate crystallization should contain preferably at least 175 g/kg of sodium carbonate and not more than 60 g/kg of 5 sodium chloride, and not more than 20 g/kg of sodium sulfate. Consequently, the purge level of sodium alkali (carbonate or bicarbonate) sent to a pond is reduced compared to a decahydrate treatment of the purge but is still important and represents important volumes sent into ponds.
US2011/112298 discloses a method for extending the life of tailings ponds 10 produced from purge streams containing sodium carbonate wherein the purge stream is treated with gaseous carbon dioxide, similar to the US2009/0291038 process, to produce sodium bicarbonate or sodium sesquicarbonate before being introduced in the pond. The produced sodium bicarbonate may be recovered before the introduction of the treated purge stream into tailings pond or 15 recovered after its deposition into the pond. The document is silent on further valorizing the obtained aqueous purge when sodium bicarbonate is recovered.
However, there is still a need in the sodium carbonate and bicarbonate industry, taking into account sustainable development, to be able to further reduce the purge volume and reducing the loss of alkali in a simple way, without 20 impairing operation conditions of the linked processes.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
Accordingly, the invention concerns a process for producing sodium bicarbonate from a sodium carbonate bearing stream (A) part of it generated by a sodium carbonate crystallizer, said sodium carbonate bearing stream (A) 25 comprising sodium carbonate and at least 2%, advantageously at least 3%, more advantageously at least 4% sodium chloride and/or sodium sulfate by weight, which comprises the following steps: a) mixing the sodium carbonate bearing stream (A) with at least a part of a stream (B) to produce a stream (C), 30 b) bicarbonating the stream (C) with a gas (D) comprising CO2 to produce an aqueous suspension (E) comprising crystals (F), said crystals (F) comprising sodium bicarbonate crystals, c) separating the aqueous suspension (E) in order to obtain crystals (F) comprising sodium bicarbonate crystals on the one hand and an aqueous 3 5 mother liquor (G) on the other hand, -6- d) partly debicarbonating the aqueous mother liquor (G) and removing part of the water to obtain the stream (B) and an optional gas (H), e) recycling at least a part of the stream (B) to step a), and f) removing the remainder (I) of the stream (B) or a part (J) of the aqueous 5 mother liquor (G) to be further processed.
A first advantage of the present invention is that it reduces considerably the amount of alkali loss in the evaporative (or tailings) ponds in a smooth and inexpensive way.
A second advantage of present invention is that it is efficient on a large 10 spectrum of soluble impurities and a large range of impurities concentrations.
A third advantage of the present invention linked to the second advantage is that it enables to exploit one or several trona deposits with different levels of soluble impurities while being able to treat the varying levels of the purges of a soda ash or a sodium bicarbonate plant with the same process described in the 15 present invention.
A fourth advantage of the present invention is that it enables to minimize the purge flow preparing the process for either dry-cooking the purge or for very small evaporative ponds or for reinjecting the purge into mined out cavities.
A fifth advantage of the present invention is that it enables to reduce water 20 consumption for soda ash production and/ or sodium bicarbonate production in recovering it as condensates from evaporators for either recycle it to a calcined trona leaching or to a trona solution mining.
A sixth advantage of the present invention is that it enables to increase the production of valuable technical sodium bicarbonate from sodium alkaline 25 streams comprising impurities.
A seventh advantage of the present invention is that the obtained technical sodium bicarbonate contains less water-soluble impurities that the sodium carbonate that would have been produced in equivalent conditions of water-soluble impurities concentration.
30 An eighth advantage of the present invention is that the obtained technical sodium bicarbonate is well suited for specific uses such as flue gas mitigation despite high impurities concentration.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
Figure lisa flow diagram which schematically illustrates the process of the 35 present invention.
-7-
Figure 2 is a flow diagram of a process according to an embodiment of the present invention.
The reference figures and letters quoted below refer to the attached drawings.
5 DEFINITIONS
For purposes of the present description, certain terms are intended to have the following meanings.
The term "purge" refers to a stream withdrawn from a part of a process to limit impurity concentration in this process.
10 The term "impurity" refers to a compound different from the sodium carbonate and/or the sodium bicarbonate to be produced.
The term "solubility" refers to the water solubility of a compound in an aqueous solution.
The term “carbonating” refers to the action of increasing the amount of 15 total carbonate (carbonate and bicarbonate) of a stream.
The term “decarbonating” refers to the action of decreasing the amount of total carbonate (carbonate and bicarbonate) of a stream.
The term “bicarbonating” refers to the action of increasing the amount of bicarbonate of a stream.
20 The term “debicarbonating” refers to the action of decreasing the amount of bicarbonate of a stream.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
The present invention relates to a process for producing sodium bicarbonate from a sodium carbonate bearing stream (A), a part of which is 25 generated by a sodium carbonate crystallizer, said sodium carbonate bearing stream (A) comprising sodium carbonate and at least 2%, advantageously at least 3%, more advantageously at least 4% sodium chloride and/or sodium sulfate by weight, which comprises the following steps: a) mixing the sodium carbonate bearing stream (A) with at least a part of a 30 stream (B) to produce a stream (C), b) bicarbonating the stream (C) with a gas (D) comprising CO2 to produce an aqueous suspension (E) comprising crystals (F), said crystals (F) comprising sodium bicarbonate crystals, c) separating the aqueous suspension (E) in order to obtain crystals (F) 35 comprising sodium bicarbonate crystals on the one hand and an aqueous mother liquor (G) on the other hand, -8- d) partly debicarbonating the aqueous mother liquor (G) and removing part of the water to obtain the stream (B) and an optional gas (H), e) recycling at least part of the stream (B) to step a), and 1) removing the remainder (I) of the stream (B) or part (J) of the aqueous 5 mother liquor (G) to be further processed.
The present invention relates also to a process for the joint production of sodium carbonate and bicarbonate crystals comprising in a first step introducing a sodium carbonate solution comprising sodium carbonate and at least one impurity consisting of sodium chloride and/or sodium sulfate into a sodium 10 carbonate crystallizer, producing a first aqueous suspension comprising sodium carbonate crystals, subjecting the first aqueous suspension to a separation, in order to obtain crystals comprising sodium carbonate on the one hand, which are valorized, and a mother liquor on the other hand, part of the mother liquor is taken out of the sodium carbonate crystallizer to constitute the sodium carbonate 15 bearing stream (A) to be further processed according the present invention into crystals (F) comprising sodium bicarbonate crystals.
In the present invention, the sodium carbonate crystallizer means a crystallizer wherein crystals comprising sodium carbonate are generated. The sodium carbonate crystallizer is selected from the group consisting of: an 20 anhydrous sodium carbonate crystallizer, a monohydrate sodium carbonate crystallizer, a heptahydrate sodium carbonate crystallizer, a decahydrate sodium carbonate crystallizer, a sodium sesquicarbonate crystallizer, a wegscheiderite crystallizer (wegscheiderite being Na2C03.3NaHC03 and also called decemite), and any combination thereof. In the present invention, the sodium carbonate 25 crystallizer may also be a container or an evaporative or tailings pond wherein crystals comprising sodium carbonate compounds are formed.
Advantageously, the sodium carbonate crystallizer is a sodium carbonate monohydrate crystallizer or a sodium sesquicarbonate crystallizer. More advantageously, the sodium carbonate crystallizer is a sodium carbonate 30 monohydrate crystallizer.
The sodium carbonate bearing stream (A) may be any stream made of a solid, a suspension of a solid in an aqueous solution, or an aqueous solution comprising sodium carbonate, and suitable for feeding a sodium bicarbonate crystallizer.
35 The sodium carbonate bearing stream (A) may derives partly or totally from trona or nahcolite. Preferably, the sodium carbonate bearing stream (A) -9- derives partly or totally from trona. In the present invention, the trona is generally processed by conventional mining. Advantageously, the trona may be also processed by solution mining.
The sodium carbonate bearing stream (A) may also derive, in part or in its 5 entirety, from tailings pond solids comprising sodium carbonate. This may be of particular advantage if the considered tailings pond solids are rich in silicates, as the sodium bicarbonate crystals formed at step b) will catch most of the silica present in the stream (C), and this may improve the flowability of crystals (F).
In a preferred embodiment, the sodium carbonate bearing stream (A) is an 10 aqueous solution (A’) comprising sodium carbonate. In a more preferred embodiment, the aqueous solution (A’) is a purge from a sodium carbonate crystallizer. And in a most preferred embodiment, the aqueous solution (A’) is a purge from a sodium carbonate monohydrate crystallizer. In a variant of this most preferred embodiment the aqueous solution (A’) is a purge from a sodium 15 carbonate monohydrate crystallizer in combination with tailings pond solids deriving from sodium carbonate crystallizers purges.
In another variant of this most preferred embodiment, the process of the present invention is coupled with the process described in WO2011/138005A1 (Solvay Chemicals), which is incorporated herewith by reference. In this case the 20 process of the present invention further comprises: k) depositing the remainder (I) of the stream (B) in a tailings pond, wherein part of the remaining sodium carbonate in the tailings pond crystallizes into a solid mass comprising sodium carbonate decahydrate and wherein a concentrated solution (Q) is formed comprising impurities selected from the 25 group consisting of silicates, sodium chloride, sodium sulfate, organic matter, and combinations of two or more thereof, l) optionally contacting said solid mass with a leach solution to selectively dissolve at least a portion of a first impurity from the contacted mass into the leach solution to form a leachate and a leached residue, collecting the 30 leached residue, dissolving at least a portion of the leached residue in an aqueous medium to form a liquor; optionally carrying out a second impurity removal step comprising performing a magnesium treatment to form a treated liquor, said treatment comprising adding a magnesium compound during dissolution of the leached residue or adding a magnesium compound 35 to said liquor or a portion thereof after dissolution of the leached residue in order to form water-insoluble matter with at least a portion of a second - 10- impurity, and passing said treated liquor though at least one separation unit to remove water-insoluble matter and to obtain a purified solution; and m) providing said solid mass or said liquor or said purified solution as a feedstock to a process which produces a crystalline product comprising 5 sodium carbonate, sodium bicarbonate, sodium sulfite, or other derivatives.
The remainder (I) of the stream (B) or a part (J) of the mother liquor (G) are concentrated in water-soluble salts and other impurities present in the sodium carbonate bearing stream (A). Therefore in another variant of the present invention, the process further comprises at least one of the following steps: 10 n) disposing off the remainder (I) of the stream (B) or a part (J) of the mother liquor (G) in a solution mining cavity or a mined out cavity or in a deep well injection or, o) recycling the remainder (I) of the stream (B) or a part (J) of the mother liquor (G) or a part (L) of the liquor (K) in a solution mining cavity or a 15 mined out cavity, and recovering a sodium carbonate aqueous solution from the mining cavity or from the mined out cavity, wherein the recovered sodium carbonate aqueous solution comprises sodium chloride and/or sodium sulfate at a sodium chloride and/or sodium sulfate concentration less than the concentration of sodium chloride and/or the concentration of 20 sodium sulfate in the remainder (I) or the part (J) or the part (L).
Steps n) or o) are particularly advantageous when the sodium carbonate bearing stream (A) derives, in part or in its entirety, from trona or nahcolite, as it enables to recycle the water-soluble salts that were originally present in the ore within the mine cavity, the mine or the deep well. Moreover, the pH of the final 25 purges may be controlled by way of the sodium bicarbonate content, as sodium bicarbonate is a natural pH buffer. Thus the volume that is recycled in such cavity or mine, or deep well, is much reduced compared to the volume of the original ore extracted from the cavity or from the mine, or from the deep well.
Generally, the sodium carbonate bearing stream (A) comprises at least 15 30 weight percent of sodium carbonate expressed on dry soluble salts.
Advantageously, stream (A) comprises at least 20, more advantageously at least 24 weight percent of sodium carbonate expressed on dry soluble salts.
The stream (A) is advantageously selected from the group consisting of recycle and purge streams from sodium carbonate or sesquicarbonate 35 crystallizers, mine water streams, evaporative pond bittern aqueous streams, - 11 - water and sodium carbonate decahydrate deposits, other waste streams, and any combinations thereof.
Stream (A) comprises generally at most 98, advantageously at most 95, more advantageously at most 85 weight percent of sodium carbonate expressed 5 on dry soluble salts. When the sodium carbonate bearing stream (A) is a suspension of a solid in an aqueous solution, or an aqueous solution, it comprises generally at most 99, advantageously at most 90, more advantageously at most 80 weight percent of water. This enables to limit the number of recycling in the sodium bicarbonate loop of the present invention.
10 If the sodium carbonate stream derives from a solid stream, or is an aqueous suspension, or an aqueous solution concentrated in sodium carbonate, water (N) may be added to the sodium carbonate bearing stream (A) so that the combination of the stream (B) with stream (A) forms a feeding stream (C) suitable to form crystals (F) comprising sodium bicarbonate crystals when 15 bicarbonated. In particular, the amount of water (N) is controlled in order to limit the density of suspension of crystals (F) in the aqueous suspension (E) to generally at most 60 w%, advantageously at most 50 w%, preferably at most 40w%, more preferably at most 35 w%. The density of suspension of solids in an aqueous suspension being the weight ratio of the solid reported to the aqueous 20 suspension.
In the present invention, the stream (A) comprises at least 2%, advantageously at least 3%, more advantageously at least 4% sodium chloride and/or sodium sulfate by weight.
The stream (A) may contain high level of sodium chloride and/or sodium 25 sulfate. Though advantageously, the concentration of stream (A) in sodium chloride and/or sodium sulfate should be limited to a maximum value so that the stream (G), corresponding to the mother liquor of the bicarbonate crystallizer separated at step c), has a concentration of at most 26% (260 g/ kg) in sodium chloride or 20% (200 g/kg) in sodium sulfate by weight in order to avoid 30 reaching the limit of water-solubility of sodium chloride and/or sodium sulfate in stream (G). In the case that stream (A) comprises both sodium chloride and sodium sulfate, those two impurities concentration in stream (G), noted respectively [NaCl](G) and [Na2SC>4](G) and expressed in g/kg, should be advantageously limited according the following equation: 35 [NaCl](G) / 1.3 + [Na2S04](G) < 200 g/kg - 12-
Also when significant concentration of other highly water-soluble salts with common ion with sodium, or chloride, or sulfate ions, in a proportion when cumulated of at least 5 % in weight of the cumulated sodium chloride and sodium sulfate amount of stream (A), those impurities salt concentrations should 5 be added to the sum of the concentrations of sodium chloride and sodium sulfate, and this later sum should preferably be maintained to at most 20% (200 g/kg) by weight in stream (G).
In the present invention, the streams (I) or (J) ( or (L)) are used to control the alkaline metal water-soluble salt concentration, such as sodium chloride, or 10 sodium sulfate concentrations, in the aqueous mother liquor (G) during bicarbonation step b). When the flow of streams (I) or (J) ( or (L)) increase, the concentration of the alkaline metal water-soluble salt(s) concentration(s) Ci(G) in the process loop decreases, and vice versa. Those flows may be adjusted so that at the targeted concentration of the alkaline metal water-soluble salt in the 15 aqueous mother liquor (G) or in the streams (I) or (J) ( or (L)), the flows of purged alkaline metal water-soluble salt in the corresponding streams (I) or (J) or (L)) equal the entering flow of the alkaline metal water-soluble salt entering in the process (ie.via streams (A), (A’), (A”) and (A’”) minus the flow of the alkaline metal water-soluble salt exiting the process with the crystals (F).
20 Generally, when the stream (A) is the aqueous purge of a monohydrate crystallizer, the NaCl concentration of the purge is at most 5% and the Na2SC>4 concentration of the purge is at most 7% expressed on the aqueous solution in weight. Indeed a classical MVR (Mechanical Vapor Recompression) crystallizer cannot operate at NaCl levels significantly higher than 2-3% without 25 crystallizing anhydrous sodium carbonate, which causes operational difficulties. Triple effects monohydrate evaporator crystallizer is operated at lower temperatures and can accept higher concentrations of NaCl, up to 4-5% depending on a number of factors. A Na2SC>4 concentration above 3 to 7% induces burkeite crystals (Na2C03.2Na2SC>4) formation at the crystallizer 30 temperature (between 40° to 100°C).
Typical natural soda ash plant from trona have a Na2C03 feed concentration in the liquor of 28 to 30% by weight, NaCl feed concentration of about 0.2%, and/or Na2S04 feed concentration of about 0.05 to 0.2%, meaning that a traditional plant in the prior art comprising a sodium carbonate crystallizer 35 can operate between 10 and 20 cycles of concentration. This number of cycle of concentrations is generally close to the ratio of the final concentration to the - 13 - feeding concentration of the water-soluble impurity. This is what ultimately imposes product loss, purge volumes, and the size of ponds and disposals in a natural soda ash plant without recovery of the valuable alkali. The present invention enables to sensitively increase the number of cycles of concentrations 5 from 10 to 20 cycles up to 75 cycles, and even more in a simple way. Moreover, the present process enables to limit the energy consumption and related costs reported to the total sodium carbonate production, when the sodium carbonate stream (A) is a purge of a sodium carbonate crystallizer, as the purge represents generally from 2 to 15% of the sodium carbonate flow entering the sodium 10 carbonate crystallizer.
In present invention, the partly debicarbonating of the aqueous mother liquor (G) and the removing of part of the water at step d) may be done by any mean known in the art. The partly debicarbonating and removing of part of the water may be done in one step or in several steps. Generally the debicarbonating 15 is done by chemical calcination using caustic soda to transform part of the sodium bicarbonate of liquor (G) into sodium carbonate, or done by thermal debicarbonation using steam or using a boiler to decompose thermally part of sodium bicarbonate into sodium carbonate, water and CO2. Thermal debicarbonation using steam or a boiler is preferred. The removing of part of the 20 water of liquor (G) may be done in a falling film evaporator, or in a boiler, or in a forced circulation evaporator, or in a forced circulation evaporator crystallizer known in the art.
The process of the invention using a thermal debicarbonator at step d) is illustrated in figure 1 (Fig. 1). The sodium carbonate bearing stream (A) is 25 mixed with part of a stream (B) to produce a stream (C). The stream (C) is bicarbonated with a gas (D) comprising CO2 in a carbonating device 1 to produce an aqueous suspension (E) comprising crystals (F), said crystals (F) comprising sodium bicarbonate crystals. The suspension (E) is separated into crystals (F) comprising sodium bicarbonate crystals on the one hand and an 30 aqueous mother liquor (G) on the other hand with a separation device 2. The aqueous mother liquor (G) is partly debicarbonated and part of the water is removed to obtain the stream (B) and an optional gas (H) comprising CO2 in a debicarbonator 3. Therefore the stream (B) is more concentrated in water-soluble salt content than the stream (G). At least part of the stream (B) is recycled to 35 form the stream (C) when it is combined with stream (A). The remainder (I) of - 14- the stream (B) is removed from the loop (which includes the devices 1, 2, 3) or a part (J) of the aqueous mother liquor (G) is removed to be further processed.
Figure 2 is a flow diagram of a process according to an embodiment of the present invention. In this embodiment, the debicarbonation and the removal of 5 part of the water of stream (G) is done into two steps, and optional water and CO2 gas (H) recyclings are shown in doted lines. In this embodiment, the sodium carbonate bearing stream (A) may be mixed with optional water (N) to form an aqueous solution (A’) comprising sodium carbonate, and mixed with a stream (B) to produce a stream (C). The stream (C) is bicarbonated with a gas (D) 10 comprising CO2 in a carbonating device 1 to produce an aqueous suspension (E) comprising crystals (F), said crystals (F) comprising sodium bicarbonate crystals. The suspension (E) is separated into crystals (F) comprising sodium bicarbonate crystals on the one hand and an aqueous mother liquor (G) on the other hand with a separation device 2. The aqueous mother liquor (G) is debicarbonated in a 15 debicarbonator 3 to produce a mother liquor (K) depleted or lean in sodium bicarbonate and a vapor (H) comprising carbon dioxide, and the mother liquor (K) is partially evaporated to remove part of the water in an evaporator 4 to obtain the stream (B) and the water steam (P). The stream (B) may be a clear liquid or a slurry. Optionally, a portion of or the entirety of the water steam (P) 20 may be recycled to the debicarbonator 3 and injected directly or after recompression of steam or may be recycled to the debicarbonator 3 as indirect heating by a boiler. At least part of the stream (B) is recycled to form stream (C) when it is combined with stream (A). The remainder (I) of the stream (B) is withdrawn from the loop, and/or a part (J) of the aqueous mother liquor (G) is 25 withdrawn from the loop, and/or a part (L) of the mother liquor (K) is withdrawn from the loop to be further processed. Those streams (I), (J), (L) are indeed useful to control the water-soluble salt concentrations, such as sodium chloride, or sodium sulfate concentrations, in the aqueous mother liquor during bicarbonation step b) in the bicarbonator 1.
30 In a variant of this embodiment, a sodium carbonate bearing stream (A”), such as one or more mine waters, or tailings pond waters, or diluted waters, may be added to the mother liquor (K) depleted or lean in sodium bicarbonate before partially evaporating it to remove part of the water so as to obtain the stream (B). This allows to advantageously avoid the limit of water-solubility of sodium 35 carbonate and/ or sodium chloride or sodium sulfate in the evaporator 4.
- 15 -
In another variant of this embodiment, if a sodium carbonate bearing stream (A’”) such as one or more mine waters, tailings pond waters, or diluted waters, have a sodium bicarbonate content, or a water content and a sodium bicarbonate content, to be first decreased before being recycled in the 5 bicarbonator 1, an adequate point to introduce this stream A”’ in the process is in the debicarbonator 3 with the aqueous mother liquor G.
Optionally, in the embodiment illustrated in Fig. 2, at least a portion of the gas (H) is used for bicarbonating the stream (C) with the gas (D). Indeed, the gas (H) comprises a high content of CO2 and the remainder of its content is mainly 10 steam (water vapor) that may be reused at step b), without water condensation or with water condensation and water removal, before being introduced in stream (D) to control the water balance of the present process with the water removal via withdrawal of stream (I), (L), (J) and (P) from the loop.
In the present process, at step b), the gas (D) is a gas comprising at least 15 20, advantageously at least 30, more advantageously at least 40, even more advantageously at least 80 volume % CO2 expressed on dry gas.
The bicarbonation step b) is operated at any temperature compatible with known domain of sodium bicarbonate. Preferably, the bicarbonation step b) is operated at a temperature of at least 20°C, advantageously at least 38°C, more 20 advantageously at least 55°C, and even more advantageously at least 70°C.
A too high temperature may be detrimental to CO2 absorption when not operated at pressure above atmospheric pressure. Therefore, the bicarbonation step b) is generally operated at a temperature of at most 100°C, advantageously at most 90°C, more advantageously at most 80°C, and even more advantageously 25 at most 75°C.
In the present invention, the crystals (F) obtained at step b) comprise sodium bicarbonate crystals. Advantageously, the operating point (mother liquor concentrations of sodium bicarbonate, of sodium carbonate, and of soluble salts such as NaCl and NaiSCU) in the carbonation step should be controlled so that it 30 remains in the sodium bicarbonate domain of the water solubility diagram. This is achieved supplying enough CO2 in the bicarbonator so that the sodium carbonate concentration in the bicarbonator mother liquor (G) is less than the limit of sodium carbonate concentration at the sodium sesquicarbonate solubility noted [Na2C03](sesqui) at the operating temperature.
35 If [X](G) represents the soluble salt concentrations expressed in g /kg of
NaCl, or of Na2SC>4, or the sum of NaCl and Na2SC>4 concentrations if both salts - 16- are present, this is generally achieved between 20° to 80°C, when the sodium carbonate concentration of the mother liquor (G), noted [Na2CC>3](G), is less than the following value (expressed in g/kg): 170- 0.66 [X](G)(g/kg) 5 A security margin should be taken so that the sodium carbonate concentration is preferably at most this value minus 5 g/ kg, more preferably at most this value minus 10 g/ kg, and most preferably at most this value minus 20 g/kg.
This allows the crystallization of mainly sodium bicarbonate. Then if the 10 corresponding crystals (F) are separated from their mother liquor (G) which is concentrated in NaCl and/ or Na2SC>4, and if optionally the obtained crystals are washed when necessary to remove high levels of impregnating mother liquor and water-soluble salts such as NaCl or Na2SC>4, the content of crystals (F) comprising sodium bicarbonate crystals is generally at least 40 wt%, or at least 15 50 wt%, preferably at least 60 wt%, more preferably at least 80 wt%, and most preferably at least 90 wt% of sodium bicarbonate. The crystals (F) comprises generally at most 50 wt%, or at most 30 wt%, or at most 20 wt%, preferably at most 10 wt%, more preferred at most 5 wt%, and most preferred at most 3 wt% of sodium carbonate.
20 The content of the crystals (F) in water-soluble salts such as sodium chloride and/or sodium sulfate is generally at most 10 wt.%, preferably at most 4 wt.%, more preferably at most 1 wt.%,
Concerning the final use of the obtained crystals (F) comprising sodium bicarbonate, the process of the present invention may further comprise: 25 g) optionally washing the crystals (F) comprising sodium bicarbonate to produce optionally-washed crystals comprising sodium bicarbonate, h) drying the optionally-washed crystals comprising sodium bicarbonate.
Alternatively, it is possible to calcine, in part or partly or totally the sodium bicarbonate rather than solely drying the crystals in step h).
30 In that case, the process according the present invention further comprises the steps of: g) optionally washing the sodium bicarbonate crystals to produce optionally-washed crystals comprising sodium bicarbonate, and i) calcining the optionally-washed crystals comprising sodium bicarbonate into 35 crystals comprising sodium carbonate.
- 17-
When calcining, partly or totally, the sodium bicarbonate of the crystals at step i), a gas (0) comprising carbon dioxide is generated. The carbon dioxide and the water can be, totally or partly, recovered and recycled to the bicarbonation step.
5 Therefore the process of the present invention may further comprise the step: j) recovering at least part of the gas (0) comprising carbon dioxide and recycling it to step b).
EXAMPLES
10 The following examples are intended only to exemplify the invention and are not intended to limit the scope of the claimed invention.
Example 1
Table 1 exemplifies a mass flow sheet of an embodiment of the process of the present invention as described in Figure 2, wherein the main water-soluble 15 salt impurity of the sodium carbonate stream (A) is sodium chloride.
This example shows the strong interest in the case where the sodium carbonate stream (A) is a purge from a sodium carbonate crystallizer; the mass flow rate of the final purge (I) is 226 kg/ h, such value representing less than a quarter of the value of the original purge (A) at 1000 kg/h, and the loss of 20 sodium carbonate from the final purge (I) is 27 kg/h so a reduction in mass by a factor of almost 9 compared to the initial value of 242 kg/h of sodium carbonate in the initial purge (A), thanks to the recycling loop associated with a debicarbonator and an evaporator of the present process.
By comparison, US2009/0291038 (Solvay) shows in its Example 1 a 25 decrease of sodium alkali loss in the final purge of 60%, compared to about 90% in present Example 1, and a reduction of 10% of the mass flow rate of the initial purge compared to about 77% in the present Example 1.
Example 2
In this example, the same data of Table 1 can illustrate a mass flow rate 30 sheet of an embodiment of the process of the present invention as described in Figure 2, wherein the main water-soluble salt impurity of the sodium carbonate stream (A) is sodium sulfate (Na2S04). In this case, sodium chloride (NaCl) mass flow rate and sodium chloride (NaCl) concentrations should be respectively interpreted as Na2SC>4 mass flow rates and Na2SC>4 concentrations rather than 35 those of NaCl.
- 18 -
Example 3 to 7 (EO to E6)
In these examples, similar equipment and operating conditions as those used in Example 1 of US2009/0291038 (Solvay) were used but the bicarbonation was operated in batch, in an agitated 3-liter reactor, at 70°C, with CO2 gas at 5 100% vol. dry concentration and saturated with water, with one hour of residence time.
The obtained crystals were filtered, washed with water and ethanol, and dried for 24 hours at ambient temperature.
Table 2 gives the results of the analysis of initial and final mother liquors, 10 of the obtained crystals, the density of suspension (solid weight reported to the suspension weight) and also of particles size distribution of the obtained crystals.
Should the disclosure of any patent, patent applications, and publications that are incorporated herein by reference conflict with the present description to the extent that it might render a term unclear, the present description shall take 15 precedence.
- 19-
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/-s 3 m in in fe -g ^ o it ^ g m mm m1 j? "*? oo ^ in o m Ui t S !£20!iji
Wj3oo ^ ^ ^ ^ 2 t? m°m S' e§ St o St St
G/ ÖX) ^ ON ON
S J δ s § § § δ ^ 2 3 §
-ö ri vn^omofi „ ΟΊ m O
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_ O
«N
1 l S m_mo — m λ io 8 H^gofsSinoUJit^O g A.?2 -H^mm^fS^C" E3 <3 13 w pq --1--1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1--1-1-1-1--1-1-1-1- c/3
M
cd s
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™ ^ Sul S 3 3 Ö 3 * g o s g O ^ & O - £ 5, td 9, G o 5 2 53 9i ü O a I 5j y 1 « ί n « 3 ®
O TOCÖCÖ <N O Cd Cd Cd (N O O ro CÖ O ? Q <s O O
-20-
Ref. Trial # EO E2 E3 E6
Temperature °C 70 70 70 70
Residence time h 1 1 1 1
Initial mother liquor_____
NaHC03 g/kg__79__54__44 45
Na2C03 g/kg 49__52__52 50
NaCl g/kg 136 144__153 75
Na2S04 g/kg__-__:__75 H20 g/kg 736 750 751 755
Total g/kg 1000 1000 1000 1000
Final mother liquor_____
NaHC03 g/kg__50__48__45 62
Na2C03 g/kg 11__20__10 17
NaCl g/kg 146 153 165 78
Na2S04 g/kg__-__:__77 H20 g/kg 793 779 780 766
Total g/kg 1000 1000 1000 1000
Final dried solid_____
NaHC03 g/kg 942 915 908 906
Na2C03 g/kg 29__38__41 38
NaCl g/kg__9__30__42__8
Na2S04 g/kg__-__:__:__8 H2Q__g/kg 20__17__9 40
Suspension density w%__619__C3__C5__4,7
Partiele size distri._____ dlO pm 121__41__39 50 d50 pm 376 129 125 126 _d90_ pm 678 280 415 566
Table 2 - Operating conditions, and chemical and physical analysis of the obtained crystals of Examples 3 to 7 (respectively referenced E0, E2, E3, E6).
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FR3070397B1 (en) * | 2017-08-29 | 2019-09-06 | Sede Environnement | PROCESS FOR THE VALORISATION OF GASEOUS EFFLUENTS FROM ALCOHOLIC FERMENTATION |
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US3647365A (en) * | 1970-01-06 | 1972-03-07 | Olin Corp | Coarse light sodium bicarbonate |
JPS5560021A (en) * | 1978-10-27 | 1980-05-06 | Toyo Soda Mfg Co Ltd | Production of sodium bicarbonate |
FR2646154B1 (en) * | 1989-04-24 | 1991-06-28 | Solvay | SODIUM BICARBONATE AND PROCESS FOR THE CRYSTALLIZATION OF SODIUM BICARBONATE |
CN1133586C (en) * | 1999-04-19 | 2004-01-07 | 内蒙古伊克昭化工研究设计院 | Cold separation and carbonization process for preparing sodium carbonate from natural soda |
US20030017099A1 (en) * | 2001-07-20 | 2003-01-23 | Church & Dwight Co., Inc. | Sodium bicarbonate production method |
US7255841B2 (en) * | 2001-07-20 | 2007-08-14 | Church & Dwight Co., Inc. | Sodium bicarbonate production method |
US6667021B2 (en) * | 2001-09-12 | 2003-12-23 | General Chemical Corporation | Method for producing enhanced sodium carbonate crystals for making sodium bicarbonate |
WO2006023657A2 (en) * | 2004-08-17 | 2006-03-02 | Sesqui Mining Llc | Methods for constructing underground borehole configurations and related solution mining methods |
ES2357004T3 (en) * | 2004-08-24 | 2011-04-15 | Asahi Glass Company, Limited | METHOD TO PRODUCE ALKALINE METAL HYDROGEN-CARBONATE. |
TR200403060A2 (en) * | 2004-11-11 | 2006-06-21 | Eti Soda Üretim Pazarlama Nakliyat ve Elektrik Üretim Sanayi ve Ticaret A. Ş. | Production of heavy soda, sodium bicarbonate, light soda and sodium silicate from bicarbonate containing solutions |
EP2078697A1 (en) * | 2008-01-08 | 2009-07-15 | SOLVAY (Société Anonyme) | Process for producing sodium carbonate and/or sodium bicarbonate from an ore mineral comprising sodium bicarbonate |
US20090291038A1 (en) * | 2008-05-23 | 2009-11-26 | Solvay (Societe Anonyme) | Process For The Joint Production of Sodium Carbonate and Sodium Bicarbonate |
CN103025660A (en) * | 2010-05-04 | 2013-04-03 | 索尔维化学有限公司 | Impurities removal from waste solids in the production of soda ash, sodium bicarbonate and/or other derivatives |
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