US857793A - Method of recovering sulfate crystals. - Google Patents

Method of recovering sulfate crystals. Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US857793A
US857793A US30932106A US1906309321A US857793A US 857793 A US857793 A US 857793A US 30932106 A US30932106 A US 30932106A US 1906309321 A US1906309321 A US 1906309321A US 857793 A US857793 A US 857793A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
sulfate
crystals
solution
tanks
crystallizing
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
US30932106A
Inventor
Fred H Daniels
Axel F Backlin
Henry K Swinscoe
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.)
American Steel and Wire Company of New Jersey
Original Assignee
American Steel and Wire Company of New Jersey
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
Application filed by American Steel and Wire Company of New Jersey filed Critical American Steel and Wire Company of New Jersey
Priority to US30932106A priority Critical patent/US857793A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US857793A publication Critical patent/US857793A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C22METALLURGY; FERROUS OR NON-FERROUS ALLOYS; TREATMENT OF ALLOYS OR NON-FERROUS METALS
    • C22BPRODUCTION AND REFINING OF METALS; PRETREATMENT OF RAW MATERIALS
    • C22B23/00Obtaining nickel or cobalt
    • C22B23/04Obtaining nickel or cobalt by wet processes
    • C22B23/0407Leaching processes
    • C22B23/0415Leaching processes with acids or salt solutions except ammonium salts solutions
    • C22B23/043Sulfurated acids or salts thereof

Definitions

  • Figure 1 1s a plan view showing one form of apparatus for carrying out our invention
  • Fig. 2 is a vertical section on the line A-A of Fig. 1
  • Fig. 3 is a side elevation, partly broken away showing the multiple effects
  • Figs. 4 and 5 are respectively a lan view I 5 and an elevation showing a modifie arrangement of the tanks and'conveye'rs.
  • the purpose of our invention is to provide a cheap and efficient process for recovering sulfate of iron fi'o'mthe liquor which results from the pickling of iron or steel wire, rods,
  • the object of the invention is to provide a process by. which a valuable commercial roduct may be obtained from this liquor in 5 arge amounts and at small expense.
  • the invention is also applicable with suitable changes in the materials of the apparatus, to the recovery of sulfate of copper .from the liquor resulting from the pickling of 3 co per, rods, etc.
  • the solution becomes neutralized, that is to say, when the free acid has been substantially satisfied by the iron with which it comes in contact, it is removed by suitable pumps into a settling-tank 3 in which the 5 mechanical impurities present in the liquor are settled by gravity, and from this settlingtank the solution is drawn successively into vacuum evaporators 4, 4;, 4, known 1n the art as multiple effects.
  • vacuum evaporators 4, 4;, 4, known 1n the art A suitable number of these effects may be employed.
  • Each one contains'tubes preferably made of copper, and the effects are provided with vacuumroducing apparatus.
  • the di ute neutralizedjiquor is supplied to the first effect, where it comes in contact with and circulates within or around the copper tubes, which are filled with or are surrounded by a heating medium, and in this effeet a art of the water passes off in the form of vapor.
  • the liquor then asses to the second effect, in which it is furt er evaporated, and in the same manner to the other Patented June 25, 1907.
  • the steam for supplying the coils of the first efiect may be exhaust steam or live steam supplied from an outsidesource, and the steam for the heating-coils of the second effect may be obtained by utilizing the vapor generated by the boiling of the liquor in the first effect.
  • the vapor from the second efiect may be passed'to the coils of the third effect, and so on, the vapors from the liquor in the final effect being passed into j a suitable condenser equipped with a vacuum pump, From the final effect the concentrated liquor 'is delivered by 'a pump 5 either to the preliminary cooler or settling-tank, or directly into a number of crystallizing-tanks which may be located on a lower floor.
  • the intermediate cooler may consist as shown, of a conical shell or dome 6 of steel or iron, which may be cooled in any suitable manner, as by an air blast beneath it.
  • the liquor in passing over this dome loses a ortion of'its heat and consequently crysta lizes more readily, and is then passed to the crystallizing-tanks through ipes 7-7.
  • the tank shown as a cooler may be used only as a settling-tank, as described, thus avoiding the forming of crystals in the pipes which convey the liquor therefrom to the crystallizing-tanks.
  • the crystallizing-tank's 8, 8 may be of any desirable form, such as round, rectangular, or square, and across the tops are laid planks or boards 9, from which are suspended a large number of thin iron slabs or plates 10. These plates referably extend vertically and reach nearfy to the bottoms of the tanks. The crystals form on these slabs as well as on the sides of the tanks, and the mother liquor is then drawn oif and returned to the storage tanks, after which the crystals are preferably shoveled by hand from the crystallizingtanks on to suitable conveyers 10 and 11 extending between the rows of tanks.
  • FIGs. 4 and 5 we show a modified arra ement of the tanks and conveyers in which the conveyers 12 and 13 discharge upon a cro s-conveyer 14.
  • This conveyer again delive s the crystals to an inclined conveyer 15, which discharges into a hopper 1 6 provided with spouts and gates through which the ma' terial may be char ed into any desired number of centrifugal driers 17.
  • the larger percentage of moisture may be drawn off from the crystals by centrifugal force in these driers, which may be of any desirable and well known type.
  • the dried crystals are dropped from the bottoms of the centrifugal 1ers upon an inclined conveyer 18, which in turn delivers them to an overhead conveyer 19 arranged so that the crystals can be unloade into any of a series of bins. From these bins the crystals may be drawn off through spouts to the railroad cars orcharged into barrels in the building.
  • a process of obtaining in a continuous manner a crystalline metallic sulfate which consists in at least partially neutralizing an acid solution of a metallic sulfate by adding the same metal as the base of the sulfate, transferring the solution to a separate vessel where the impurities separate and then continuously feeding the neutralized solution by gravity and evaporating the solution in a vacuum to the crystallizing point, then transferring it to a crystallizing tank; substantially as described.
  • a process of obtaimng in a continuous manner a crystalline metallic sulfate which consists in at least partially neutralizin an acid solution of a metallic sulfate by adding the same metal as the base of the sulfate, continuously withdrawing and hot concentrating the solution under vacuum, and transferring the concentrated solution to crystallizing tanks in a substantiall continuous manner; substantially as descri ed.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Manufacturing & Machinery (AREA)
  • Materials Engineering (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Metallurgy (AREA)
  • Organic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Physical Or Chemical Processes And Apparatus (AREA)

Description

' PATENTED JUNE 25, 1907.
P. H..DANIELS, A. F. BAGKLING: H. KVSWINSGOE. METHOD OF RBGOVERING SULFATE CRYSTALS.
APPLIOATIOHIILED APR. 2, 1906. v
' 4 SHEETS-SHEET l.
mven W W1 2% Tons WITNESSES No. 857,793. PATENTEDJUNE 25, 1907. F. H. DANIELS, A. F. BAGKLIN & H. SWINSGOE. METHOD OF REGOVERING SULFATE CRYSTALS.
APPLICATION FILED APR. 2 1906.
' 4 SHEETS-SHEET z.
WITNESSES INVENTORS.
; MJM
PATENTED JUNE 25, 1907.
K. SWINSCOE'.
F. H. DANIELS, A. F. BAGKLIN & H.
METHOD OF REGOVERING SULFATE CRYSTALS.
4 SHEETS-SHEET 3.
APPLICATION FILED APR. 2,1906.
I--.-D--:l:.--b---:::-Lnfiiiim :LQ
INVENTORS vhzv Jfiwa,
WITN ESSES PATENTED JUNE 25, 1907. A. P. BAGKLIN & H. K. swmscoa. METHOD OF REGOVERING SULFATE CRYSTALS.
F. H. DANIELS APPLIOATION FILED APR. 2.1906.
4 SHEETS-SHEET 4.
WITN ESSES 78% wmLwa/kfl UNITED STATES PA TENT OFFICE.
FRED DANIELS, AXEL F. BACKLIN, AND HENRY K. SWINSCOE, OF WORCES TER, MASSACHUSETTS, ASSIGNORS TO AMERICAN STEEL AND WIRE COMPANY, OF WORCESTER, MASSACHUSETTS, A CORPORATION OF NEW JERSEY.
METHOD OF RECQVERING SULFATE CRYSTALS.
Specification of Letters Patent.
Application filed an 2,1906. Serial No. 309,321.
To all whom it may concern:
Be it known that we, FRED H. DANIELs, AXEL F. BAGKLIN, and HENRY K. SwINscoE, of Worcester, Massachusetts, have invented a new and useful Method of Recovering Sulfate Crystals, of which the following is a specification, reference beinghad to the accompanying drawing, in which Figure 1 1s a plan view showing one form of apparatus for carrying out our invention; Fig. 2 is a vertical section on the line A-A of Fig. 1; Fig. 3 is a side elevation, partly broken away showing the multiple effects;
Figs. 4 and 5 are respectively a lan view I 5 and an elevation showing a modifie arrangement of the tanks and'conveye'rs.
The purpose of our invention is to provide a cheap and efficient process for recovering sulfate of iron fi'o'mthe liquor which results from the pickling of iron or steel wire, rods,
plates, sheets, etc., in an acid bath.
The object of the invention is to provide a process by. which a valuable commercial roduct may be obtained from this liquor in 5 arge amounts and at small expense.
The invention is also applicable with suitable changes in the materials of the apparatus, to the recovery of sulfate of copper .from the liquor resulting from the pickling of 3 co per, rods, etc.
n the practice of our invention, we take the sulfate liquor from the pickling vats and deliver it to suitable stora e tanks 2 in which it is neutralized by the ad ition of waste iron 3 5 or steel wire or other iron or steel scrap. These tanks are referably provided with steam coils 2 to eat the solution somewhat in order to prevent premature crystallizing in the tanks.
When the solution becomes neutralized, that is to say, when the free acid has been substantially satisfied by the iron with which it comes in contact, it is removed by suitable pumps into a settling-tank 3 in which the 5 mechanical impurities present in the liquor are settled by gravity, and from this settlingtank the solution is drawn successively into vacuum evaporators 4, 4;, 4, known 1n the art as multiple effects. A suitable number of these effects may be employed. Each one contains'tubes preferably made of copper, and the effects are provided with vacuumroducing apparatus.
The di ute neutralizedjiquor is supplied to the first effect, where it comes in contact with and circulates within or around the copper tubes, which are filled with or are surrounded by a heating medium, and in this effeet a art of the water passes off in the form of vapor. The liquor then asses to the second effect, in which it is furt er evaporated, and in the same manner to the other Patented June 25, 1907.
effect or effects, where it is finally concentrated. The steam for supplying the coils of the first efiect may be exhaust steam or live steam supplied from an outsidesource, and the steam for the heating-coils of the second effect may be obtained by utilizing the vapor generated by the boiling of the liquor in the first effect. In the same manner the vapor from the second efiect may be passed'to the coils of the third effect, and so on, the vapors from the liquor in the final effect being passed into j a suitable condenser equipped with a vacuum pump, From the final effect the concentrated liquor 'is delivered by 'a pump 5 either to the preliminary cooler or settling-tank, or directly into a number of crystallizing-tanks which may be located on a lower floor.
If the intermediate cooler is employed, it may consist as shown, of a conical shell or dome 6 of steel or iron, which may be cooled in any suitable manner, as by an air blast beneath it. The liquor in passing over this dome loses a ortion of'its heat and consequently crysta lizes more readily, and is then passed to the crystallizing-tanks through ipes 7-7. The tank shown as a cooler may be used only as a settling-tank, as described, thus avoiding the forming of crystals in the pipes which convey the liquor therefrom to the crystallizing-tanks.
The crystallizing-tank's 8, 8 may be of any desirable form, such as round, rectangular, or square, and across the tops are laid planks or boards 9, from which are suspended a large number of thin iron slabs or plates 10. These plates referably extend vertically and reach nearfy to the bottoms of the tanks. The crystals form on these slabs as well as on the sides of the tanks, and the mother liquor is then drawn oif and returned to the storage tanks, after which the crystals are preferably shoveled by hand from the crystallizingtanks on to suitable conveyers 10 and 11 extending between the rows of tanks.
In Figs. 4 and 5 we show a modified arra ement of the tanks and conveyers in which the conveyers 12 and 13 discharge upon a cro s-conveyer 14. This conveyer again delive s the crystals to an inclined conveyer 15, which discharges into a hopper 1 6 provided with spouts and gates through which the ma' terial may be char ed into any desired number of centrifugal driers 17. i The larger percentage of moisture may be drawn off from the crystals by centrifugal force in these driers, which may be of any desirable and well known type. The dried crystals are dropped from the bottoms of the centrifugal 1ers upon an inclined conveyer 18, which in turn delivers them to an overhead conveyer 19 arranged so that the crystals can be unloade into any of a series of bins. From these bins the crystals may be drawn off through spouts to the railroad cars orcharged into barrels in the building.
The process above described is simple and efficient. The crystals are obtained cheaply and in large quantities, and contain a minimum of moisture, and the apparatus which we employ enables the operation to be carried on continuously and with little hand labor.
We do not claim herein theapparatus disclosed, as this is reserved for, and forms the subject-matter of our divisional co-pending application No. 329,002, filed August 3rd, 1906, for apparatus for recovering sulfate crystals.
Within the scope of our invention as stated in the claims, many changes maybe made in the form and arrangement of the apparatus and in the steps of the process. Some of the steps of the process may be employed without others, or may be employed 1n other combinations, since what we claim is:
1. A process of obtainin in a continuous manner a crystalline meta lic sulfate which consists in at least partially neutralizin an acid solution of a metallic sulfate by ad ing the same metal as the base of the sulfate, transferring the solution to a separate vessel where the impurities separate and then withdrawing and evaporatin the solution in a vacuum to the crysta point, then stantially as described.
2. A process of obtaining in a continuous manner a crystalline metallic sulfate which consists in at least partially neutralizing an acid solution of ametallic sulfate by adding the same metal as the base of the sulfate, maintaining such solution at a temperature above the crystallizing point, then evaporating the solution in a vacuum to the crystallizing point, and then transferring it to a crystallizing tank; substantially as described.
3. A process of obtaining in a continuous manner a crystalline metallic sulfate which consists in at least partially neutralizing an acid solution of a metallic sulfate by adding the same metal as the base of the sulfate, transferring the solution to a separate vessel where the impurities separate and then continuously feeding the neutralized solution by gravity and evaporating the solution in a vacuum to the crystallizing point, then transferring it to a crystallizing tank; substantially as described.
4. A process of obtainin in a continuous manner a crystalline meta lic sulfate which consists in at least partially neutralizing an acid solution of a metallic sulfate b adding the same metal as the base of the sul ate, continuously withdrawing the treated solution and concentrating it to the crystallizing point in successive steps under vacuum while maintaining a substantially constant current in the solution and then transferring the concentrated solution continuously to crystallizing tanks; substantially as described.
5. A process of obtaimng in a continuous manner a crystalline metallic sulfate which consists in at least partially neutralizin an acid solution of a metallic sulfate by adding the same metal as the base of the sulfate, continuously withdrawing and hot concentrating the solution under vacuum, and transferring the concentrated solution to crystallizing tanks in a substantiall continuous manner; substantially as descri ed.
In testimony whereof, We have hereunto set our hands.
FRED H. DANIELS. AXEL F. BACKLIN. HENRY K. SWINSOOE.
Witnesses WM. A. BACON, H. M. LATHAM.
transferring it to a crystallizing tank; sub-
US30932106A 1906-04-02 1906-04-02 Method of recovering sulfate crystals. Expired - Lifetime US857793A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US30932106A US857793A (en) 1906-04-02 1906-04-02 Method of recovering sulfate crystals.

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US30932106A US857793A (en) 1906-04-02 1906-04-02 Method of recovering sulfate crystals.

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US857793A true US857793A (en) 1907-06-25

Family

ID=2926247

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US30932106A Expired - Lifetime US857793A (en) 1906-04-02 1906-04-02 Method of recovering sulfate crystals.

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US857793A (en)

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2440215A (en) * 1946-03-21 1948-04-20 Chemical Construction Corp Treatment of iron sulfate liquors
US2721562A (en) * 1952-11-07 1955-10-25 Belle Fons Chemical Corp Pickling and pickling agent regeneration apparatus

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2440215A (en) * 1946-03-21 1948-04-20 Chemical Construction Corp Treatment of iron sulfate liquors
US2721562A (en) * 1952-11-07 1955-10-25 Belle Fons Chemical Corp Pickling and pickling agent regeneration apparatus

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
KR20090061591A (en) Process for the preparation of nitrobenzene by adiabatic nitration
US1837869A (en) Phthalic anhydride shot-like pellet
US2124729A (en) Concentrating acid solutions
US857793A (en) Method of recovering sulfate crystals.
US2785059A (en) Solvent extraction of sulphur
US1957006A (en) Method of and apparatus for condensing sulphur
US2709143A (en) Method and apparatus for pickling and for recovering spent acid solutions
US4056363A (en) Apparatus for the fabrication of pure alumina from Al2 O3 and silica containing raw materials by leaching with hydrochloric acid
US1969793A (en) Concentrator apparatus
US2204777A (en) Apparatus for the recovery of salts from aqueous solutions
US2391484A (en) Apparatus for treating ammonium sulphate crystals
US3697387A (en) Process and device for the purification of a mixture of organic substances of high molecular weight
US3233982A (en) Apparatus for manufacture of ferric chloride
US3790448A (en) Method of purifying waste fluid
JP2024502475A (en) Petroleum coke processing equipment, processing method and processing system
US863279A (en) Method of recovering sulfate crystals.
US2877146A (en) Metallurgical pickling
US1256068A (en) Method of recovering sulfate crystals.
US1877060A (en) Method and apparatus for carrying out chemical reactions
GB402324A (en) Process of and apparatus for the production of coarse crystals by evaporation in vacuo and stagewise cooling
US2707712A (en) Method of and apparatus for the extraction of solid materials
US158924A (en) Improvement in apparatus for concentrating and evaporating sulphuric acid
US2441873A (en) Process for recovering molten phthalic anhydride
US2255445A (en) Production of sulphuric acid and iron oxide from waste pickling acid
US1402336A (en) Apparatus for making ethylene