Background of the invention
[0001] This invention relates to the chlorination of titaniferous materials using porous
carbon reductants.
[0002] Titaniferous materials are often subjected to chlorination as chlorination is an
efficient and economical way to obtain a high purity source of titanium for making
titanium alloys, titanium compounds, and especially pigmentary titanium dioxide. Several
processes have been described in the art for the chlorination of titaniferous materials.
Such processes generally react a titanium-containing raw material such as rutile ore
or ilmenite ore, with a chlorine-providing material and a carbon reductant at an elevated
temperature according to one or both of the following equations:

[0003] Conventional chlorination reactions are generally carried out at about 1000°C., but
can be carried out at any temperature in the range from 800°C. to 2000°C., using various
carbon reductants and chlorine sources. Low-temperature chlorination, i.e., at a temperature
below 800°C., has also been suggested. To achieve chlorination at the lower temperatures,
a very reactive chlorine source, preagglomeration of reactants or other techniques
have been suggested. Other chlorination processes have also been suggested to reduce
or eliminate the chlorination of impurities commonly found in titaniferous raw materials
and thereby improve the efficiency or economy of the process.
[0004] The carbon reductants utilized by the various processes are from divergent sources
such as coal, coke, charcoal, and carbon-containing gases, and the particle size of
the carbon typically is determined by other process parameters or desired economic
conditions. However, contrary to the teachings of the prior art which place little
emphasis on the carbon reductant, it has now been found that the carbon used in the
chlorination of a titaniferous material can have a substantial effect on the completeness
of said chlorination reaction and under some conditions render the vanadium impurities
readily separable from the chlorinated product. Further, it has now been found that
fluidized bed techniques can be effectively used in low temperature chlorination of
granular titaniferous materials without the use of heretofore required fine grinding,
preagglomeration of titaniferous material and carbon reductant, or resorting to highly
reactive chlorine sources such as NOCI. Additionally it has been found that powdered
titaniferous materials can be chlorinated in economic fashion in a downflow reactor
and still further that other chlorination processes such as the laminar flow chlorination
process described in U.S. Patent 4,138,899 can be greatly enhanced by using a porous
carbon having micropores with a pore diameter of less than 2 nm (20 A) as the carbon
reductant in such processes.
[0005] One embodiment of the present invention is to chlorinate titanium-containing materials
and ores in a fluid bed at a temperature of at least 600°C. using a porous carbon
reductant.
[0006] A second embodiment of the present invention is to chlorinate powdered titanium-containing
materials and ores in a down-flow chlorination reactor.
[0007] A third embodiment of the present invention is to chlorinate titanium- and iron-containing
materials and ores producing titanium chlorides and by-products metallic iron in a
laminar flow process.
[0008] Additionally, an object and advantage of the present invention is that the present
chlorination process can be more selective relative to impurity oxides in the materials
and ores being chlorinated resulting in greater reactor efficiency and ease of operation
due to the absence of normally liquid or sticky chlorides produced during high-temperature
chlorination processes which adhere to reactor surfaces.
[0009] A still further object and advantage of the present invention is that vanadium impurities
in the titanium-containing reactants can be rendered readily separable from the titanium-containing
products if the reaction temperature is maintained at greater than 800°C.
[0010] These and other objects and advantages of the present invention will become more
apparent from the detailed description of the invention.
Summary of the invention
[0011] The present invention is a process for the chlorination of titaniferous materials.
A mixture of titaniferous material and porous carbon reductant having internal surface
due to micropores of less than 2 nm (20 A) is reacted with a chlorine-providing material
in a chlorination reaction zone at a temperature of at least 600°C. The present process
has been found effective and efficient for substantially chlorinating the titanium
values of most titanium-bearing ores. Additionally, at temperatures greater than 800°C.
vanadium impurities in the titanium-containing materials can be rendered readily separable
from the titanium-containing products.
Detailed description of the invention
[0012] The present invention is a chlorination process.
[0013] Porous carbon reductants useful in the present invention contain micropores having
a pore diameter of less than about 2 nm (20 A). Typically such porous carbon reductants
will have at least 10 m
2/g. of surface area in such micropores, advantageously at least 100 m
2/g. of surface area in such micropores and preferably about 500 m
2/g. of such internal surface. Non-porous carbons and carbons having exclusively large
pores, e.g. charcoal, are not useful in the present process. In addition the preferred
carbons used in the present invention have less than 1500 m
2/g internal surface area and preferably less than 1000 m
2/g of internal surface area in said micropores.
[0014] The carbon particles can be any size useful in a chlorination process. For example,
in a fluidized bed process such particles must be small enough to be fluidized by
the fluidizing gas and yet be large enough such that they are not carried out of the
fluid bed by the off-gas stream. Granular materials of about -8 mesh are typical.
However, the average particle size can range from 4 mesh to 200 mesh and be useful
in a fluid-bed process. Preferably the carbon particles will have an average particle
size greater than 100 mesh and will be substantially retained on a 140-mesh screen.
In a down-flow process the carbon particles must be small enough to fall at a rate
similar to the titaniferous material particles, such rate of fall being sufficiently
slow to allow an adequate time within the reactor for chlorination to take place.
Powdered materials of about -200 mesh are generally adequate here; however, various
sizes, generally -140 mesh and finer, may be useful. In a laminar flow process the
carbon particles must also be appropriately sized; however, in this case they must
be so sized as to pass through the chlorination reactor in substantially laminar flow
with the titaniferous material. Suitable materials are predominantly less than 40
microns and substantially all will pass through a 325-mesh sieve.
[0015] A preferred high surface area carbon is an appropriately sized coal treated to increase
its intemal surface area by making it porous. Coal is an inexpensive source of carbon
and can be obtained relatively free of undesirable impurities. It is readily available
in various sizes and size distribution useful in the present invention. Coal is also
an amorphous form of carbon and this attribute has been found to be advantageous in
the present invention.
[0016] The titaniferous material useful in the present invention can be any titanium-containing
compound or raw material such as rutile ore, ilmenite ore, or other. A particularly
advantageous embodiment of the present invention is that the present chlorination
process can be carried out at low temperature in a fluid-bed utilizing naturally occurring
titanium-bearing sand such as naturally occurring sand-size rutile ore exemplified
by certain Australian beach sands. Such sand-sized rutile ore is typically -40 mesh
and +140 mesh. However, titaniferous materials having various particle sizes can be
used in this and'other embodiments of the present invention. Typically the titaniferous
material will be similarly sized to the carbon reductant with which it reacts. Various
sizes from -4 mesh to -325 mesh can be useful. In addition, the titaniferous material
can be substantially pure or contain a wide variety of impurities.
[0017] For practical and economic operation of the fluid-bed embodiments of the present
invention the titaniferous material should contain at least 90% Ti0
2; however, other embodiments will operate with lesser amounts of Ti0
2 in the titaniferous material. For example, in the laminar flow embodiment of the
present invention, the titaniferous material must contain a substantial proportion
of iron for practical commercial scale operation, most often utilizing an Fe/Ti ratio
of 0.5 to 1.5. Impurities present in the titaniferous raw materials will chlorinate
along with titanium values; however, the problem created by such impurity chlorination
can be minimized by operating certain embodiments of the present process within preselected
temperature ranges as described herein.
[0018] The chlorine-providing material can be chlorine gas, HCI, an organo-chloride or mixture
thereof. In the fluid-bed embodiment of the present chlorination process the chlorine-providing
material is used as the fluidizing gas in the process. As such, it is preferred that
the gas contain a high percentage of chlorine such that a minimum volume of fluidizing
gas can be used and maximum reaction rates obtained. Chlorine gas (C1
2) is preferred; however, also organo-chlorides can be used. Highly reactive chlorine
sources such as NOCI and selective chlorination agents such as FeCI
2 are not within the scope of the present invention.
[0019] The titaniferous material and the porous carbon reductant are intimately mixed within
the chlorination reaction zone. Discrete particles of titaniferous material and carbon
reductant are utilized in the present invention. Preagglomeration of the titaniferous
material and carbon together into larger granules is not practiced; however, some
preagglomeration of titaniferous fines into larger titaniferous material granules
or of carbon fines into larger carbon granules, may be practiced within the scope
of the present invention. Such agglomerates of titaniferous materials or of carbon
reductant are considered to be discrete particles for present purposes so long as
any given agglomerate contains only titaniferous material or only carbon reductant
and not both.
[0020] During the reaction process, the temperature is maintained greater than 600°C. The
off-gas stream is then collected and cooled to condense the products and facilitate
collection.
[0021] According to the fluid-bed embodiment of the present invention, granular porous carbon
reductant and granular titaniferous material are blended together and charged into
the fluid-bed reactor. The reactor temperature is raised to a chlorination reaction
temperature of at least 600°C. and chlorine-providing gas is introduced into the bottom
of the reactor to fluidize the bed and an off-gas product stream is withdrawn from
the top of the bed.
[0022] According to the down-flow embodiment of the present invention, powdered porous carbon
and powdered titaniferous material are entrained in a stream of chlorine-providing
gas and introduced into a chlorination reaction zone wherein they proceed in a substantially
downward path. The chlorination reaction temperature is maintained at a temperature
from 800°C. to 1200°C. and the reaction zone is sufficiently long so that the falling
carbon and titaniferous material experience a retention time of between 1 and 10 seconds
within the chlorination reaction zone.
[0023] According to the laminar flow embodiment of the present invention, a mixture of powdered
porous carbon reductant and titaniferous material is passed in substantially laminar
flow through a chlorination reaction zone maintained at 1350°C. to 1950°C., the atomic
ratio of carbon in said mixture to the oxygen content in said mixture being greater
than 1:1 for formation of CO, the ratio of the moles of chlorine in said chlorinating
agent to said titanium in said titaniferous materials being not substantially above
2 and the ratio of iron to titanium (Fe/Ti) in the titaniferous material passed into
said zone being not substantially above 2.
[0024] When operated at low temperatures of less than 800°C., the present process increases
the selectivity of the chlorination reaction for titanium values over impurities such
as aluminum, zirconium, and silicon oxides. This is beneficial because the chlorination
of aluminum produces AICI
3, which is very corrosive toward the collection chambers used in the chlorination
processes. Also, AICI, and ZrCI
4 tend to condense on the titanium chloride condensation chamber surfaces which results
in eventual plugging and shutdown. Furthermore, the production of impurity chlorides
consumes chlorine and thereby reduces the overall efficiency of the process and also
creates a pollution and disposal problem for such impurity chlorides.
[0025] A further benefit of low-temperature fluid-bed operation of the present process is
that no liquid metal chloride impurities are formed in the fluid bed itself. For example,
at 600° to 670°C. the fluidized bed and the off-gas products would be below the melting
points of normally troublesome calcium, magnesium, and iron chlorides. At conventional
operating temperatures of greater than 800°C., liquid chlorides of calcium and magnesium
tend to cause bed defluidization.
[0026] Similarly, when operating at conventional temperatures, FeC1
2 vapor tends to condense on the off-gas product pipeline wall as a liquid and cause
dusty solids in the off-gas to stick. This collection of liquid and dusty materials
will eventually plug the apparatus and cause a shutdown. At low operating temperatures
these troublesome impurity chlorides are solid and are removed from the bed as a fine
dust in the off-gas stream and therefore do not cause plugging or defluidization.
[0027] The above-described low temperature capability of the present process enables the
use of particularly impure titaniferous materials containing high levels of calcium,
magnesium, and iron impurities that previously had to be avoided in conventional fluid-bed
chlorination processes. For example, ilmenite can be chlorinated at low temperatures
in the present process without the extreme plugging problems encountered at conventional
temperatures in fluid-bed chlorination processes. Similarly, the non-fluid bed embodiments
can effectively chlorinate impure titaniferous materials.
[0028] A further advantage realized from the use of low temperatures in the present process
is the ability to increase the TiCI
4 production rate or alternatively decrease the carry-over losses of ore and carbon.
The gases in the fluid bed expand when heated to reaction temperature. This expansion
is considerably less at low temperatures. Therefore, when using a conventional amount
of chlorine-providing material, the velocity of the gases in the fluid bed would be
lower and entrain less ore and carbon in the off gas. Alternatively, more chlorine
could be used during low temperature operation of the present process compared to
conventional temperature operation and increase the production of TiCI
4 without any increase in the gas velocity.
[0029] When the present process is operated in a fluid-bed reactor at conventional chlorination
temperatures of greater than 800°C. to 2000°C., other benefits can be realized. Vanadium
values present as impurities in the titaniferous raw materials chlorinate along with
the titanium values; however, instead of being very difficult to separate from the
titanium values, the chlorinated vanadium values produced are in a different physical
form from the chlorinated titanium values and therefore easily separable. For example,
between 450°C. and 136°C., the chlorinated titanium values (primarily TiCl,) are gaseous
whereas the chlorinated vanadium values produced (believed to be VCI
3) are solid, and below 136°C. to -25°C. the chlorinated titanium values are liquid,
while the chlorinated vanadium values remain solid. Furthermore, the chlorinated vanadium
values are insoluble in both the gaseous and the liquid chlorinated titanium values.
Therefore, below 450°C., a conventional solid-gas separation or solid-liquid separation
is effective to remove the vanadium values contained in the chlorinated titaniferous
material.
[0030] A preferred solid-gas separation is the use of a cyclone separator at a temperature
of 140°C. to 300°C. and preferably 175°-200°C.; such separation is used in conventional
chlorination processes to collect particulates in the TiCI
4 gas stream, but does not remove vanadium values during conventional processing.
[0031] Preferred solid-liquid separations are decanting and filtration.
[0032] A further benefit derived from operation of the present process at temperatures above
800°C. is an enhancement of the CO content of the tail gas produced. Tail gases are
those gases that accompany the product as it leaves the chlorinator and must be disposed
of as an effluent of the process. Specifically, the CO2:CO ratio in the tail gases
of a conventional fluid-bed chlorination process is 1 or 2:1. Such tail gas must be
treated before being expelled into the environment because of the high CO level (33-50%).
This gas cannot support combustion; therefore, treatment by mere burning is precluded
and other effective treatments are costly. However, when the present porous carbon
is reacted with titaniferous material during chlorination according to the present
invention, the CO
2:CO ratio is reduced to 0.01 or 0.02:1 (98 or 99 percent CO). Even though this tail
gas contains substantially more CO than does the tail gas from conventional processes,
this tail gas can be burned directly before expelling into the atmosphere as a means
of treatment and thus is substantially easier and less expensive to treat than the
tail gas of conventional processes. Alternatively, the CO-rich tail gas can be used
for its fuel value by burning it in a boiler, kiln, or other.
[0033] The tail gases produced by the non-fluid-bed embodiments of the present invention
are believed to be similarly enhanced in CO values, however, not to the extent of
the fluid-bed tail gases. A still further benefit of the use of porous carbon in the
present chlorination process is a surprising increase in reaction rates and degree
of completion. In the case of low-temperature chlorination and down-flow chlorination
it is this feature which makes these processes feasible.
[0034] The porous carbon reductant useful in the present invention can be produced from
non-porous carbon by reacting in a fluidized bed at an elevated temperature with air,
C0
21 and/or steam until micropores are produced. Typically 5% or more of the carbon will
be burned off during such treatment. Generally the more micropores produced and the
higher internal surface area created, the higher the carbon burn-off will be. Therefore,
it is preferred to treat to a minimum effective internal surface area in order to
obtain maximum yield from the carbon raw materials. This treatment should be carried
out above 400°C. When steam or C0
2 is used, the reaction is endothermic. When air is used, the reaction is exothermic
and will maintain itself without the introduction of any outside heat source. Preferably,
such process is carried out on a continuous basis with a continuous feeding of carbon
and removal of treated product.
[0035] An economic and advantageous carbon source is coal. Preferably, the coal used in
high rank (anthracite) rather than low rank (bituminous) because the high rank coals
attain a higher internal surface area during the above treatment. The coal introduced
into the treatment process can be either wet or dry. Dry coal is actually preferred;
however, wet granular coal is a much more readily available commercial product. Water
is present in such wet coals to hold down dusting during transportation, as a remnant
from washing, flotation or other processing or from unprotected storage.
[0036] Other processes for making high internal surface area carbons are readily available.
Any available process for increasing the internal surface area of carbon can be used
for making a porous carbon reductant useful in the present invention, so long as a
sufficient amount of the internal micropores are produced. Such processes are typically
used for producing activated carbon. Commercially available activated carbons have
surface areas of about 3000 m
2/g. and are effective in the instant process. However, such materials are substantially
more expensive at this time than the above-described treated coals. Also, it has been
found that the commercially available activated carbons are not as effective and efficient
in the present process as the above-described treated coal.
[0037] The following examples show ways in which the present invention has been practiced.
In the examples, all temperatures are in degrees Centigrade and all percentages in
parts by weight, unless otherwise specified.
Example 1
[0038] Australian rutile ore containing about 96% Ti0
2 and having a particle size such that substantially all of it would pass through a
40-mesh screen and be retained on a 140-mesh screen was chlorinated by blending with
a porous carbon reductant and reacting with chlorine in a fluid-bed reactor. The reactor
consisted of a 3-inch diameter quartz tube with a porous quartz gas distributor plate
near one end.
[0039] The porous carbon reductant was prepared by treating granular anthracite coal having
a particle size such that it would substantially pass an 18-mesh screen and be retained
on a 100-mesh screen. The treatment consisted of heating the coal in a fluid bed in
air at about 450°C. until about 15% of the coal burned off and about 163 m
2/g. of internal surface had formed. Surface area as expressed here and throughout
this specification is "effective surface area" as determined from the N
2 adsorption isotherm at -195°C. and application of the standard Brunauer, Emmett,
and Teller (BET) procedure. A Digisorb 2500-Automatic Multi-Gas Surface Area and Pore
Volume Analyzer manufactured by Micromeritics Instrument Corporation, Norcross, Georgia,
was used to make these measurements. Granular anthracite coal is substantially amorphous
with very little carbon crystallinity.
[0040] The rutile ore and porous carbon were then blended together in a ratio of about 3:1
and charged into the reactor to form a bed of about 12 inches deep.
[0041] The bed was fluidized by passing N
2 gas through it, and the reactor was heated to about 575°C. After heat up, the fluidizing
gas was switched to C1
2 with a small measured amount of N
2 added to provide a standard for off-gas analysis. The C1
2 feed rate was predetermined to provide a C1
2 flow of about .35 feet per second and thus a contact time of 3 to 3.5 seconds with
the materials in the fluid bed.
[0042] The reactor temperature was raised in 20-25° intervals, allowed to stabilize, and
CO, CO
2, N
2, Cl
2 and COCl
2 levels in the off-gas were determined. Percentage of Cl
2 consumed was then calculated and plotted against temperature. This graph is shown
in Figure 1.
[0043] The CO
2/CO ratio was used to determined carbon consumption and thus additions required to
maintain the fluid-bed depth.
Example 2
[0044] In the procedure of Example 1 a steam-treated porous carbon reductant was used in
place of the air-treated carbon.
[0045] The present carbon was prepared by heating similarly sized granular coal in a fluidized
bed in the presence of super-heated steam at a temperature of about 890°C. until about
40% of the coal burned off. The steam-treated coal had a surface area of about 680
m
2/g.
[0046] A plot of temperature vs. percent CI
2 consumed is shown in Figure 1.
Example 3
[0047] In the procedure of Example 1 similarly sized untreated granular anthracite coal
was used in place of the porous carbon reductant. This granular coal had a surface
area of about 0.1 m
2/g.
[0048] A plot of temperature vs. percent Cl
2 consumed is shown in Figure 1.
Example 4
[0049] In the procedure of Example 1 similarly sized granular bituminous char was used in
place of the porous carbon reductant. The bituminous char is not porous and thus has
only external surface; however, it is substantially amorphous with very little carbon
crystallinity. The surface area of the bituminous char was about 0.3 m
2/g.
[0050] A plot of temperature vs. percent CI
2 consumed is shown in Figure 1.
Example 5
[0051] In the procedure of Example 1 calcined petroleum coke having a particle size such
that it would substantially pass through a 10-mesh screen and be retained on a 40-mesh
screen was used in place of porous carbon reductant. The petroleum coke was nonporous
and had a surface area of about 0.3 m
2/g.
[0052] The petroleum coke was substantially crystalline having about 58% crystalline carbon
and about 42% amorphous carbon.
[0053] A plot of temperature vs. percent C1
2 consumed is shown in Figure 1.
Example 6
[0054] Wet, granular (-18 mesh), anthracite coal was placed in a fluid-bed reactor and fluidized
by introduction of hot steam at a superficial velocity of 0.8 feet per second (0.24
m/sec) at a temperature of 890°C. A plot of surface area versus carbon burn-off is
shown in Figure 2. Coal treated according to this example is effective in the present
process.
Example 7
[0055] In the procedure of Example 6, C0
2 at 950°C. was used in place of steam. A plot of surface area versus percent of carbon
burn-off is shown in Figure 2. Coal treated according to this example is effective
in the present process.
Example 8
[0056] In the procedure of Example 6, air at 450°C. was used in place of steam. A plot of
surface area versus percent of carbon burn-off is also shown in Figure 2. Coal treated
according to this example is effective in the present process.
[0057] Figure 2, a graph, is attached.
Example 9
[0058] Rutile ore containing about 96.1% Ti0
2, 1.2% Fe
20
3, and 0.4% V
20
5 was chlorinated in a fluid-bed chlorinator at 1000°C. Chlorine gas and a coal treated
in accordance with Example 6 having a 5% carbon burn-off were used. A fluid-bed depth
of 14-15 inches (36-38 cm) was maintained by continuously feeding fresh ore and treated
coal. The chlorination was run for a period of 3 hours, and the CO
2:CO ratio in the chlorinator tail gas was measured about every 10 minutes via gas
chromatography. The gaseous product stream was allowed to cool partially and was passed
through a solid-gas cyclone-type separator. The temperature of the gas stream passing
through the separator was controlled at about 175°C., however, the actual temperature
varied between 150° and 200°C. The solids collected in this separator include fluid-bed
blow-over, FeCI
2 and most of the vanadium values (believed to be VCl
3). TiCl
4 was then condensed from the product gas stream and solids were allowed to settle.
These solids are present mainly due to the inefficiency of the cyclone separator,
and contain essentially the same components as the cyclone solids. The clear sample
of supernatant TiCI
4 was poured off and analyzed for vanadium. The surface area of the carbon source,
the average CO
2:CO ratio, and the vanadium impurity level in the TiCI
4 product are shown in Table I.
Example 10
[0059] In the procedure of Example 9, coal treated in accordance with Example 6 having a
40% carbon burn-off was used. Data from this chlorination are also shown in Table
I.
Example 11
[0060] In the procedure of Example 9, coal treated in accordance with Example 3 having a
carbon burn-off of 5% was used. Data from this chlorination are shown in Table I.
Example 12
[0061] In the procedure of Example 9, carbon prepared according to Example 3 having a 15%
carbon burn-off was used. Data from this chlorination are also shown in Table I.
Example 13
[0062] In the procedure of Example 9, granular (-8 mesh) anthracite coal was used without
pretreatment. Data from this chlorination are also shown in Table I.
Example 14
[0063] In the procedure of Example 9, granular petroleum coke (-8 mesh) was used. Data from
this chlorination are also shown in Table I.

Example 15
[0064] In order to further characterize the carbons useful in the present invention, three
high surface area carbons were selected. Using the BET technique, surface area in
<2 nm (=20 A) diameter pores were measured and then surface area in >2 nm (>20 A)
diameter pores were measured. The total surface area is the sum of these two measurements.
[0065] These carbons were then heated to 1000°C. in a N
2 atmosphere (to simulate heating to chlorination temperatures) and the respective
surface areas were again measured. Data are shown in Table II.
[0066] The data show that heating air-treated coals to chlorination temperature results
in a loss of surface area in both <2 nm (<20 A) and >2 nm (
>20 A) diameter pores. Steam-treated coals lose surface area due to a decrease in <2
nm (<20 A) diameter pores only. Charcoal, in contrast to the treated coals, gains
surface area after heating to a chlorination temperature, due mainly to the formation
of small pores.

[0067] In summary, the examples show the improved chlorination achieved when porous carbon
reductants are used in place of conventional nonporous carbons. The examples further
indicate that the nearly complete removal of vanadium impurities that can be easily
accomplished at conventional chlorination temperatures when porous carbon reductant
is utilized.
1. A process for chlorinating a titaniferous material which comprises reacting discrete
particles of titaniferous material and porous carbon reductant in the presence of
a chlorine-providing material selected from the group consisting of chlorine gas,
HCI, an organo-chloride and mixtures thereof in a chlorination reaction zone at a
temperature of at least 600°C. until the titanium content of said titaniferous material
is substantially chlorinated, said porous carbon reductant being characterized in
that it has micropores having a pore diameter of less than 2 nm (20 A) and internal
surface area within said micropores of between 10 m2/g. and 1500 m2/g.
2. The process of claim 1, wherein said titaniferous material and said carbon reductant
are each granular materials which substantially pass through an 8-mesh (2.38 mm) sieve
and are substantially retained on a 140-mesh (0.105 mm) sieve and said chlorination
reaction zone is a fluidized bed.
3. The process of claim 1, wherein said titaniferous material and said porous carbon
reductant are each powdered materials which substantially pass through a 140-mesh
(0.105 mm) sieve, said chlorination reaction zone is a down-flow reaction zone and
said temperature is between 800°C. and 1200°C.
4. The process of claim 1, wherein said titaniferous material and said porous carbon
reductant are each powdered materials and are maintained in substantially laminar
flow as they pass through the chlorination reaction zone, said temperature being between
1350°C. and 1950°C., the atomic ratio of carbon in said chlorination reaction zone
to the oxygen in said zone being greater than 1:1 for formation of CO, the ratio of
the moles of chlorine in said chlorine-providing material to the titanium in said
titaniferous material being not above 2 and the ratio of iron to titanium in said
titaniferous material being not above 2.
5. The process of claim 1, wherein said porous carbon reductant is a treated coal.
6. The process of claim 5, wherein said coal is anthracite coal.
7. The process of claim 5, wherein said coal was treated by reacting with air, CO2, or steam at a temperature in excess of 400°C. until said micropores are produced.
8. The process of claim 1, wherein said porous carbon reductant has an internal surface
area in said micropores of at least 100 m2/g. and not above 1000 m2/g.
9. The process of claim 1, wherein said temperature is greater than 800°C., said chlorination
reaction zone is a fluid-bed and substantially all vanadium impurities present in
said titaniferous material are reacted thereby such that at temperatures between 450°C.
and -25°C. said reacted vanadium impurities are in a different physical form from
said chlorinated titanium content of said titaniferous material.
10. The process of claim 1, wherein said titaniferous material is ilmenite ore.
1. Procédé de chloruration d'une matière titanifére dans lequel on fait réagir des
particules discrètes de matière titanifére et de réducteur carboné poreux en présence
d'une matière fournissant du chlore choisie dans le groupe constitué par le chlore
gazeux, HCI, un chlorure organique et leurs mélanges dans une zone de réaction de
chloruration à une température d'au moins 600°C jusqu'à ce que la teneur en titane
de ladite matière titanifère soit pratiquement chlorée, ledit réducteur au carbone
poreux étant caractérisé en ce qu'il a des micrcpores ayant un diamètre de pores inférieur
à 2 nm (20 A) et une surface interne dans lesdites micropores comprise entre 10 m2/g et 1500 m2/g.
2. Procédé de la revendication 1, où ladite matière titanifère et ledit réducteur
carboné sont l'un et l'autre des matières granulaires qui passent pratiquement à travers
un tamis de 2,38 mm et sont pratiquement retenus sur un tamis de 0,105 mm et ladite
zone de réaction de chloruration est un lit fluidisé.
3. Procédé de la revendication 1, où ladite matière titanifère et ledit réducteur
au carbone poreux sont l'un et l'autre des matières en poudre qui passent pratiquement
à travers un tamis de 0,105 mm d'ouverture de maille, ladite zone de réaction de chloruration
est une zone de réaction d'écoulement et ladite température est comprise entre 800°C
et 1200°C.
4. Procédé de la revendication 1, où ladite matière titanifère et ledit réducteur
au carbone poreux sont l'un et l'autre des matières en poudre et sont maintenus dans
un écoulement pratiquement laminaire au moment où ils passent à travers la zone de
réaction de chloruration, ladite température étant comprise entre 1350°C et 1950°C,
le rapport atomique du carbone dans ladite zone de réaction de chloruration à l'oxygène
dans ladite zone étant supérieur à 1:1 pour la formation de CO, le rapport des moles
de chlore dans ladite matière fournissant du chlore au titane dans ladie matière titanifère
n'étant pas supérieur à 2 et le rapport du fer au titane dans ladite matière titanifère
n'étant pas supérieur à 2.
5. Procédé de la revendication 1, où ledit réducteur au carbone poreux est un charbon
traité.
6. Procédé de la revendication 5, où ledit charbon est du charbon d'anthracite.
7. Procédé de la revendication 5, où l'on traite ledit charbon par réaction avec de
l'air, CO2, ou de la vapeur à une température dépassant 400°C jusqu'à production desdits micropores.
8. Procédé de la revendication 1, où ledit réducteur au carbone poreux a une surface
interne dans lesdits micropores d'au moins 100 m2/g et ne dépassant pas 1000 m2/g.
9. Procédé de la revendication 1, où ladite température est supérieure à 800°C, ladite
zone de réaction de chloruration est un lit fluide et pratiquement toutes les impuretés
de vanadium présentes dans ladite matière titanifère sont mises à réagir de manière
qu'aux températures comprises entre 450°C et -25°C lesdites impuretés au vanadium
ayant réagi soient sous une forme physique différente de ladite teneur en titane chloré
de ladite matière titanifère.
10. Procédé de la revendication 1, où ladite matière titanifère est le minerai d'ilménite.
1. Verfahren zum Chlorieren von titanhaltigem Gut, in dem in einer Chlorierungszone
diskrete Teilchen des titanhaltigen Gutes und ein poröses kohlenstoffhaltiges Reduktionsmittel
bei einer Temperatur von mindestnes 600°C in Anwesenheit eines aus der Klasse Chlorgas,
HCL, Organchloride und Gemische derselben ausgewählten chlorabgebenden Gutes umgesetzt
werden, bis der Titangehalt des titanhaltigen Gutes im wesentlichen chloriert ist,
dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß das poröse kohlenstoffhaltige Reduktionsmittel Mikroporen
mit einem Porendurchmesser von mindestens 2 nm und eine Poreninnenfläche von 10 m2/g bis 1500 m2/g besitzt.
2. Verfahren nach Anspruch 1, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß das titanhaltige Gut und
das kohlenstoffhaltige Reduktionsmittel körnige Stoffe sind, die durch ein Sieb mit
einer Maschenweite von 2,38 mm im wesentlichen vollständig hindurchgehen und von einem
Sieb mit einer Maschenweite von 0,105 mm im wesentlichen vollständig zurückgehalten
werden, und daß die Chlorierungszone eine Wirbelschicht ist.
3. Verfahren nach Anspruch 1, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß das titanhaltige Gut und
das poröse kohlenstoffhaltige Reduktionsmittel Pulver sind, die durch ein Sieb mit
einer Maschenweite von 0,105 mm im wesentlichen vollständig hindurchgehen, und daß
die Chlorierungszone eine abwärts durchströmte Reaktionszone ist und die genannte
Temperatur zwischen 800 und 1200°C beträgt.
4. Verfahren nach Anspruch 1, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß das titanhaltige Gut und
das poröse kohlenstoffhaltige Reduktionsmittel Pulver sind und beim Durchtritt durch
die Chlorierungszone in einem im wesentlichen laminaren Strömungszustand gehalten
werden, daß die genannte Temperatur zwischen 1350 und 1950°C beträgt, daß in der Chlorierungszone
das Atomverhältnis von Kohlenstoff zu Sauerstoff größer ist als 1:1, sodaß CO gebildet
wird, daß das Molverhältnis des Chlors in dem chlorabgebenden Gut zu dem Titan in
dem titanhaltigen Gut höchstens 2 beträgt und daß das Molverhältnis des Eisens zu
dem Titan in dem titanhaltigen Gut höchstens 2 beträgt.
5. Verfahren nach Anspruch 1, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß das poröse kohlenstoffhaltige
Reduktionsmittel behandelte Kohle ist.
6. Verfahren nach Anspruch 5, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß die Kohle Anthrazit ist.
7. Verfahren nach Anspruch 5, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß die Kohle bis zur Bildung
der Mikroporen durch eine Reaktion mit Luft, C02 oder Wasserdampf bei einer Temperatur über 400°C behandelt worden ist.
8. Verfahren nach Anspruch 1, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß das poröse kohlenstoffhaltige
Reduktionsmittel in den Mikroporen eine Fläche von mindestens 100 m2/2 und höchstens 1000 m2/g besitzt.
9. Verfahren nach Anspruch 1, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß die genannte Temperatur
höher ist als 800°C, die Chlorierungszone ein Fließbett ist, und im wesentlichen alle
in dem titanhaltigen Gut enthaltenden das in dem titanhaltigen Gut verunreinigendes
Vanadium im wesentlichen vollständig derart umgesetzt wird, daß sich bei Temperaturen
zwischen 450 und -25°C das umgesetzte Vanadium in einem anderen Aggregatzustand befindet
als der chlorierte Titangehalt des titanhaltigen Gutes.
10. Verfahren nach Anspruch 1, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß das titanhaltige Gut Ilmenit
ist.