A high-efficiency hydrocyclone designed by response surface methodology for acid hydrolysis residue recycling
Author(s) -
Yanxia Xu,
Tang Bo,
Xingfu Song,
Jianguo Yu
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
royal society open science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.84
H-Index - 51
ISSN - 2054-5703
DOI - 10.1098/rsos.172339
Subject(s) - response surface methodology , residue (chemistry) , hydrolysis , hydrocyclone , environmental science , acid hydrolysis , chemistry , pulp and paper industry , process engineering , computer science , waste management , biological system , biochemical engineering , chromatography , engineering , organic chemistry , biology , physics , classical mechanics
A high-efficiency hydrocyclone was designed by response surface methodology to evaluate the recycling of acid hydrolysis residues from titanium dioxide (TiO 2 ) production as a study case. TiO 2 is an important product and the world's best white pigment. During its production from ilmenite (FeTiO 3 ) by the sulfuric acid method, the incomplete reaction produces large amounts of residue, which also contain unreacted ilmenite. Large amounts of residue are generally accumulated without any treatment. Hydrocyclone use is regarded as a method for separating and recovering chemicals from process residues by which the unreacted components can be recycled efficiently. However, hydrocyclones designed by conventional procedures may have some limitations regarding classification sharpness. In this paper, numerical experiments and laboratory tests were performed to evaluate the classification sharpness of various hydrocyclone designs. Response surface methodology was used to optimize hydrocyclones with different structural configurations. Based on the response models, a designed hydrocyclone with a high sharpness of classification of particles was constructed. The sharpness of the newly designed hydrocyclone increased from 80.5% to 93.3%. The vortex finder separated approximately 89.9% of the fine particles in impurities, while 51.0% of TiO 2 was recycled by the spigot. The hydrocyclone proposed in this paper properly minimizes the risk of environmental pollution caused by TiO 2 production and provides a significant estimated cost savings.
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