Augmenting the Magnesite Yield Produced during Aqueous Mineral Carbonation of Dunite Rock | AIChE

Augmenting the Magnesite Yield Produced during Aqueous Mineral Carbonation of Dunite Rock

Authors 

Rashid, M. I. - Presenter, The University of Newcastle
Benhelal, E., The University of Newcastle
Farhang, F., The University of Newcastle
S Rayson, M., The University of Newcastle
Brent, G. F., Orica Ltd
Stockenhuber, M., The University of Newcastle
Kennedy, E. M., The University of Newcastle
The capture, storage and utilisation of CO2 emissions from large volume point sources is challenging. Given the volume of CO2 to be sequestered from these sources, it is necessary to consider all magnesium-rich (ultramafic) rocks as potential feedstocks when developing a mitigation process based on mineral carbonation. This research explores serpentinised dunite (which comprises 61% lizardite) as a potential feedstock for mineral carbonation. Dunite rock for this study was collected from a dunite quarry (located near Bingara), The Great Serpentinite Belt, NSW, Australia. The dunite was characterised using XRD, TGA-MS and ICP-OES techniques and this showed the presence of olivine and brucite, more reactive components compared to the predominate lizardite mineral.

Dunite was first heat-activated (630 °C, 4 h), similar to the procedure adopted for serpentinite rocks to increase their chemical reactivity. Heat-activation converts crystalline lizardite mineral into an amorphous, reactive phase and the use of this heat-activated material resulted in a magnesite yield of 44% compared to 20% obtained with raw dunite under similar reaction conditions. Carbonation experiments were performed using a sub 75 µm fraction of these materials at 180 °C, 130 bar CO2 pressure, 15% solids slurry and using 0.64 M NaHCO3 solution. Samples of dunite were also heat-transformed at high temperature (heat treated at 800 °C, 4 h) to convert lizardite to forsterite and these samples were also studied as feedstock for carbonation experiments. Heat-activated dunite was found to engender much higher magnesite yields compared to heat-transformed dunite (forsterite rich) and raw dunite. Magnesite yields from heat-transformed dunite (64% forsterite) were slightly higher compared to the yield obtained from raw dunite.

The fraction of magnesium, silicon and iron extracted (through acid dissolution) from the heat-activated dunite was higher compared to the heat-transformed dunite and raw dunite. Temperature programmed desorption experiments disclosed a higher number of magnesium sights in the heat-activated dunite compared to raw dunite and heat-transformed dunite, further confirming that amorphous magnesium silicate rich materials are more reactive. This study suggests that during heat-activation of dunite, harzburgite, antigorite or lizardite, conditions should be maintained to avoid forsterite formation.

The order of reactivity was found to be; heat-activated dunite > raw dunite with regrinding > heat-transformed dunite > raw dunite > raw lizardite. Forsterite-rich materials (Twin Sisters Mountain dunite, raw dunite and heat-transformed dunite) displayed incongruent dissolution while amorphous magnesium silicates rich (heat-activated dunite) showed congruent dissolution.

The OH stretch present around 3690 cm-1 wavenumber (FTIR spectra) was revealed to be due to presence of OH stretches in lizardite, which is major constituent of raw dunite. Heat-activation removes chemically bound water, so the OH bands disappear in heat-activated dunite. Following the carbonation of heat-activated dunite, the OH stretch band reappears in the carbonated samples, centred around 3680 cm-1 wavenumbers. We postulate that vicinal silanol formation has occurred during the carbonation reaction as a result of the amorphous phase reaction with water. Formation of silanol nests has been observed through FTIR and is consistent with TGA-MS analysis.

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