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The Effect of Sodium Sulfide and Anthracite Dosage on Selective Reduction of Limonite

Mining, Metallurgy and Exploration, ISSN: 2524-3470, Vol: 41, Issue: 3, Page: 1437-1446
2024
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Article Description

The process of selectively reducing limonite ore involves adding 10 wt% sodium sulfide and using anthracite as a reducing agent in varying amounts (5, 10, 15, and 20 wt%). The research aims to optimize the extraction process by studying how factors like reduction temperature, holding time, and reducing agent dosage affect on iron and nickel content and recovery. The ideal conditions identified are a temperature of 1150 °C, a 10 wt% additive, and a corresponding 10 wt% reducing agent amount, with a crucial 60-min reduction process. X-ray diffraction (XRD) results show dominant phases like iron-nickel (FeNi), iron sulfide (FeS), fayalite (FeSiO), and wustite (FeO) under these conditions, indicating complex chemical interactions. Impressive X-ray fluorescence (XRF) test results precisely measure a nickel component with a 3.03 wt% and a recovery rate of 89.32%, highlighting the process’s effectiveness in extracting potential from limonitic nickel ore. The resulting ferronickel alloy has a controlled particle size of 29.23 µm. The study emphasizes the influence of sodium sulfide and anthracite dosage on the selective reduction of limonite ore.

Bibliographic Details

Fathan Bahfie; Yepi Triapriani; Fajar Nurjaman; Slamet Sumardi; Ulin Herlina; Achmad Shofi; Riska N. Tirmayani; Pulung Karo Karo; Diah Susanti

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Engineering; Chemistry; Earth and Planetary Sciences; Materials Science

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