Title of Invention

A METHOD FOR THE PRODUCTION OF ALUMINUM HYDROXIDE

Abstract A method for the production of aluminum hydroxide, produced using the Bayer Process, comprising producing the aluminum hydroxide wherein the Total Organic Carbon of the aluminum hydroxide is less than about 0.5 milligrams Total Organic Carbon/gram of aluminum hydroxide.
Full Text ALUMINUM HYDROXIDE, MADE VIA THE BAYER PROCESS,
WITH LOW ORGANIC CARBON
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates generally to the Bayer Process and more specifically
relates to a method for removing total organic carbon from aluminum hydroxide that
has been produced using the Bayer process and the aluminum hydroxide produced
using this method.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Aluminum hydroxide, also known as alumina trihydrate, is the precursor of
many alumina-based products, including calcined alumina used for making metallic
aluminum by reduction. Aluminum hydroxide is most commonly obtained from
alumina-containing ores, such as bauxite. Recovery of the alumina content of bauxite is
generally accomplished by the well-known Bayer process which involves the digestion
of the bauxite with a caustic medium at elevated temperatures and pressures. Digestion
of the bauxite results in a saturated sodium aluminate liquor, commonly referred to as
"pregnant liquor" from which the alumina content is recovered by precipitation, usually
through addition of seed aluminum hydroxide.
In the Bayer process for the production of alumina, bauxite ore is pulverized,
slurried in water, and then digested with caustic soda, also known as sodium hydroxide,
at elevated temperatures and pressures. The caustic solution dissolves oxides of
aluminum, forming an aqueous sodium aluminate solution. The caustic-insoluble
constituents of bauxite ore, referred to as "red mud", are then separated from the
aqueous phase containing the dissolved sodium aluminate. Solid aluminum hydroxide
is precipitated out of the solution and collected as product.

In more detail, the pulverized bauxite ore is fed to a slurry mixer where a water
slurry is prepared. The slurry makeup water is typically spent liquor (described below)
and added caustic soda. This bauxite ore slurry is then diluted and passed through a
digester or a series of digesters where, under high pressure and temperature, about 98%
of the total available alumina is released from the ore as caustic-soluble sodium
aluminate. After digestion, the slurry passes through several flash tanks wherein the
pressure of the digested slurry is reduced from several atmospheres to one atmosphere
and the temperature of the slurry is reduced from about 200° C to about 105° C.
The aluminate liquor leaving the flashing operation contains from about 1 to
about 20 weight percent solids, consisting of the insoluble residue that remains after, or
is precipitated during, digestion. The coarser solid particles may be removed from the
aluminate liquor with "sand trap" cyclones. The finer solid particles are generally
separated from the liquor first by settling and then by filtration, if necessary. The slurry
of aluminate liquor leaving the flash tanks is diluted by a stream of recycled washer
overflow liquor. Any Bayer process slurry taken from the digesters through any
subsequent dilution of the slurry, including the flash tanks, but before the primary
settler, is referred hereinafter as the primary settler feed.
Normally, the primary settler feed is thereafter fed to the center well of the
primary settler, where it is treated with a flocculant. As the mud settles, clarified
sodium aluminate solution, referred to as "green" or "pregnant" liquor, overflows a weir
at the top of the primary settler and is collected. This overflow from the primary
settling tank is passed to the subsequent process steps.
The clarity of the primary settler overflow is crucial to the efficient processing
of aluminum hydroxide. If the aluminate liquor overflowing the settler contains an

unacceptable concentration of suspended solids (at times from about 10 to about 500
mg of suspended solids per liter), it must be further clarified by filtration to give a
filtrate with no more than about 10 mg suspended solids per liter of liquor. The
treatment of the liquor collected after the primary settlement to remove any residual
suspended solids before aluminum hydroxide is recovered is referred to as a secondary
clarification stage.
The clarified sodium aluminate liquor is seeded with aluminum hydroxide
crystals to induce precipitation of alumina in the form of aluminum hydroxide,
A1(OH)3. The aluminum hydroxide particles or crystals are then separated from the
concentrated caustic liquor, and the remaining liquid phase, the spent liquor, is returned
to the initial digestion step and employed as a digestant after reconstitution with caustic.
Bauxite is found in many parts of the world and the composition of the ores may
vary from place to place. Many bauxites contain organic carbon (also referred to as
"organic impurities") that will be co-extracted with the alumina content of the ore
during digestion and will contaminate the produced liquor. Most of the organic carbon
content found in the ores consists of high molecular weight compounds, a portion of
which will decompose to lower molecular weight compounds during the caustic
digestion process, thereby producing a whole spectrum of organic salts dissolved in the
liquor. Since the Bayer process involves extensive recycling of the used caustic liquor
to the digestion stage, the organic carbon content of the liquor will continuously
increase, reaching levels ranging from about 5 grams carbon/liter of liquor to about 40
grams carbon/liter of liquor depending on the type of bauxite being processed. The
accumulation of organic carbon content can reach such high levels so as to seriously
interfere with the economic and efficient production of aluminum hydroxide with an

organic carbon content low enough so that the aluminum hydroxide can be used for
applications requiring a low total organic carbon content.
Since the control of organic carbon levels in Bayer process liquors is an
important facet in the production of aluminum hydroxide, several methods have already
been developed for such organic carbon level control. It has been suggested in U.S.
Patent No. 4,046,855 (Schepers et al.) that organic impurities can be removed from
Bayer process liquors by contacting the liquor with a magnesium compound which will
form a precipitated mixture of magnesium and aluminum hydroxides. This precipitate,
according to the patent, can remove some of the organic impurities either by adsorption
or by chemisorption. The magnesium compound may be added at any stage of the
Bayer process, additions prior to digestion or to the digested slurry are preferred.
Although this process is capable of removing at least a portion of the organic
impurities, the formation of a precipitated hydroxide mixture creates operational
difficulties. On the one hand, the precipitated hydroxide mixture will contain
aluminum hydroxide and this results in product alumina loss; on the other hand, the
precipitated mixture has to be separated from the rest of the treated liquor and this
involves additional processing steps and/or a definite increase in the quantity of the
total mud load which requires disposal.
In U.S. Patent No. 4,101,629 (Mercier et al.), a barium-containing compound is
added to Bayer process liquors. The barium compound precipitates as barium
aluminate and the precipitated material may also include barium salts of organic
impurities present in the liquor. As in the previously discussed patent, this process
involves precipitation of a compound which has to be removed from the treated liquor
requiring settling and/or filtration equipment and additional processing steps. The

process allows recovery and reuse of the filtered barium compound by calcination;
however, the well-known toxicity of barium salts may create an unacceptable
environmental and/or health risk not justifiable by the purification results obtainable by
it.
In U.S. Patent No. 4,335,082 (Matyasi et al.), organic impurities are removed
from impure Bayer liquors by caustifying the liquor with lime, followed by evaporation
of the causticized liquor. Evaporation will result in the precipitation of solids
containing a large quantity of the organic impurities from the liquor. The solids are
separated and then discarded. This method assures the removal of satisfactory
quantities of organic impurities from the liquor, but the problems associated with the
process render it impractical and expensive. To achieve good purification, large
volumes of liquor have to be treated with lime and evaporated. These liquor treatment
processes involve the use of large quantities of lime and extensive energy input and
large soda value losses. "Soda value" refers to any sodium salt found in Bayer process
liquor. Specifically, soda associated with sodium aluminate, free sodium hydroxide and
sodium carbonate. All of these are derived from a key raw material, caustic soda,
which represents a major raw material cost. Therefore, all Bayer process refineries
operate to minimize the loss of soda value.
A similar purification process is disclosed in U.S. Patent No. 4,280,987
(Yamada et al.). In this process, Bayer liquor is first evaporated, then calcined at high
temperature after its alumina and caustic content is adjusted to a predetermined level.
This process, known in the Bayer industry as "liquor burning," is an effective means of
organic impurity removal. Its disadvantages are associated with the large volumes to be
evaporated and then calcined, which require substantial capital and energy

expenditures. Liquor burning also requires air emission control equipment in order to
avoid air pollution issues.
In U.S. Patent No. 4,215,094 (Inao et al.), a copper-catalyzed wet oxidation
process is recommended for the oxidation of organic impurities, followed by addition
of a sulfur-containing compound to remove the copper catalyst as a precipitate. The
oxidation is accomplished under elevated temperature and pressure conditions in the
presence of a catalyst and molecular oxygen. This process has several disadvantages in
that a high temperature-pressure digestion has to be applied which involves the use of
expensive pressure vessels and substantial energy usage. In addition, the copper
catalyst has to be removed from the treated liquor to avoid contamination. Disposal of
the removed copper sulfide can create environmental and/or health hazards. Similarly,
in U.S. Patent No. 4,663,133 (Malito et al.), organic impurities are oxidized at elevated
temperature and pressure by feeding molecular oxygen directly into the bauxite
digestion vessels. The amount of oxygen used is limited to below the solubility of
oxygen in the liquor and is sufficient to destroy only a portion of the organic impurities.
Moreover, there is the potential of explosion due to the high pressures required.
In Japanese Patent No. 53-146,259 (Kazama et al.) various oxidizing agents,
such as sodium peroxide powder and 50% hydrogen peroxide, are used to destroy part
of the organic impurities. Though effective, these reagents are expensive and
hazardous. Also, the color of pregnant Bayer liquor is removed by passing a small
stream of air containing 1% ozone through pregnant Bayer liquor. However, this dilute
ozone stream only removes color and is not sufficient to oxidize any of the organic
impurities.

It would be desirable to provide an aluminum hydroxide, made via the Bayer
process, with lower levels of total organic carbon. It also would be desirable if the
process used to provide an aluminum hydroxide, made via the Bayer process, with
lower levels of total organic carbon, did not require high temperature and pressure and
is, relatively speaking, environmentally benign.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The first aspect of the instant claimed invention is in a composition of matter
which is aluminum hydroxide, produced using the Bayer Process, the improvement
comprising producing an aluminum hydroxide wherein the Total Organic Carbon of the
aluminum hydroxide is less than about 0.5 milligrams organic carbon/gram aluminum
hydroxide.
The second aspect of the instant claimed invention is in the Bayer Process to
produce aluminum hydroxide, the improvement comprising producing said aluminum
hydroxide with a Total Organic Carbon of less than about 0.5 milligrams organic
carbon/gram aluminum hydroxide, comprising the steps of:
a) dispersing the aluminum hydroxide in water, wherein the pH of the
water is greater than about 10, to create a slurry of aluminum hydroxide
in water, wherein said slurry comprises from about 50 to about 1000
grams of solids per liter of water, wherein the temperature of said slurry
is from about 5°C to about 95°C;
b) maintaining the solids in suspension in the slurry using any appropriate
agitation
technique;

c) contacting said slurry with a mixture of ozone in oxygen wherein the
concentration of ozone in oxygen is from about 1 weight percent to
about 20 weight percent and the temperature of the ozone in oxygen
mixture is from about 0 °C to about 30°C; and
d) collecting the aluminum hydroxide from the slurry.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
The first aspect of the instant claimed invention is in a composition of matter
which is aluminum hydroxide, produced using the Bayer Process, the improvement
comprising producing an aluminum hydroxide wherein the Total Organic Carbon of the
aluminum hydroxide is less than about 0.5 milligrams organic carbon/gram aluminum
hydroxide.
Aluminum hydroxide, produced according to the Bayer process, is dispersed in
water to produce a slurry containing from about 50 grams solids/liter of water to about
1000 grams solids/ liter of water, preferably from about 400 grams solids/liter of water
to about 700 grams solids/ liter of water.
The temperature of the slurry should be from about 5°C to about 95°C,
preferably from about 15°C to about 40°C and most preferably from about 20°C to
about 30 °C.
The solids should be maintained in suspension using any appropriate agitation
technique. This includes, but is not limited to, such methods as mechanical agitation in
a batch or continuous tank vessel or a fluidized bed reactor or any other suitable reactor
or by turbulent flow in a continuous pipe-flow reactor.
The pH of the slurry should be basic, greater than about 9, more preferably
greater than about 10 and most preferably greater than about 12. Any suitable base can
be used to raise and maintain the pH of the slurry at the requisite level. Suitable bases
include lithium hydroxide, sodium hydroxide, potassium hydroxide, cesium hydroxide,
magnesium oxide, calcium oxide, strontium oxide, barium oxide, or their respective

hydroxides. The preferred bases are sodium hydroxide, calcium oxide and barium
oxide. The most preferred bases are calcium oxide and barium oxide.
The calcium oxide and barium oxide bases are preferred because they react with
and precipitate the carbonate ion that is ultimately formed during the reaction of ozone
with carbon compounds, according to this generalized sequence of reactions:
O3 + C → CO2+½O2
CO2 + 20H- → CO32- + H2O
M(OH)2 +CO32- → MCO3 + 2OH- (where M = calcium or barium)
Without the removal of the carbonate ion from the water phase, the efficiency of
ozone interaction with aluminum hydroxide is reduced due to the quenching of the
hydroxyl radical. This is because the hydroxyl radical is formed from ozone and it is
the hydroxyl radical which is the reactive species responsible for the oxidation of the
organic compounds in alkaline pH.
A mixture of ozone in oxygen, containing from about 1 wt. % ozone to about 20
.wt.% ozone, is added to the aluminum hydroxide slurry at a temperature of from about
0 °C to about
30 °C, preferably from about 10 °C to about 20 °C. The ozone/oxygen mixture can be
added to the aluminum hydroxide slurry by any conventional method in an amount
which effectively removes organic carbon from the aluminum hydroxide. Typical
equipment which may be used for adding the ozone/oxygen mixture to the aluminum
hydroxide slurry includes, but is not limited to, batch or continuous tank reactors,
packed bed reactors, moving bed reactors, gas diffusers in a mixed tank and any other
device designed for contacting a gas with a liquid or a slurry. This type of equipment is

described in Helble, et al., "Advanced Effluent Treatment in the Pulp and Paper
Industry with a Combined Process of Ozonation and Fixed Bed Biofilm Reactors,"
Wat. Sci. Tech. Vol. 40, No. 11-12, pp. 343-350,1999.
After the vessel to hold the aluminum hydroxide slurry has been selected, the
preferred method of contact is to inject the mixture of ozone in oxygen into the slurry
using commercially available ozone in oxygen low-pressure injection equipment.
The amount of ozone/oxygen mixture which is added to the aluminum
hydroxide slurry is dependent upon the particular type of equipment used. The amount
of the ozone/oxygen mixture is typically in the range of from about 0.4 grams of ozone
to about 10 grams of ozone per kilogram of aluminum hydroxide solids. Though it is to
be understood by those skilled in the art that the maximum amount of the ozone/oxygen
mixture which can be added is practically limited only by the amount of ozone that can
be physically absorbed by the slurry.
The ozone remains in contact with the slurry for a time period of from about 10
minutes to about 150 minutes, preferably from about 30 minutes to about 120 minutes
and most preferably from about 60 minutes to about 90 minutes. The amount of time
the ozone remains in contact with the slurry is dependent upon many factors including
the rate of ozone addition into the slurry and the levels of solids in the slurry. The
relatively faster the ozone is added to the slurry, the relatively less the amount of time it
takes to complete the process. Optimization of the rate of addition of ozone to the
slurry and amount of time it takes to adequately remove organic carbon from the
aluminum hydroxide is within the ability of a person of ordinary skill in the art to
determine.

At the conclusion of the process the ozone feed is turned off and the solid
aluminum hydroxide is collected from the slurry using any of the typical solids
collection techniques known in the art, including, but not limited to, evaporation,
filtration, centrifugation, sedimentation and decantation.
For those intended uses requiring very pure aluminum hydroxide, the aluminum
hydroxide collected from the ozone-treated slurry may be further purified by digesting it
in sodium hydroxide solution followed by precipitation using pure aluminum hydroxide
seed. The process has the following additional steps:
e) adding the aluminum hydroxide to a solution of sodium hydroxide in
water and allowing the sodium hydroxide to digest the aluminum hydroxide;
f) adding solid aluminum hydroxide to the solution to begin seeded
precipitation of aluminum hydoxide;
g) collecting the precipitated aluminum hydroxide, which has a Total
Organic Carbon of less than about 0.2 milligrams organic carbon/gram of aluminum
hydroxide.
Aluminum hydroxide, produced using the Bayer Process and treated with ozone
and then digested and reprecipitated from sodium hydroxide can have a total organic
content of less than about 0.2 milligrams organic carbon/gram of aluminum hydroxide.
The products produced by the described processes are aluminum hydroxides,
produced via the Bayer process, with subsequent processing, wherein the aluminum
hydroxides produced have a Total Organic Carbon of less than about 0.5 milligrams
organic carbon per gram of aluminum hydroxide.

EXAMPLES
The following examples are intended to be illustrative of the present invention
and to teach one of ordinary skill how to make and use the invention. These examples
are not intended to limit the invention or its protection in any way.
Example 1
Aluminum hydroxide, produced according to the Bayer process, was dispersed
in water to produce a slurry containing about 442 grams solids/liter of water. The pH
was adjusted to a pH of at least about 12 by the addition of 33% NaOH, at a rate of
about 1 milliliter of 33% NaOH per liter of water in the slurry. The solids were
maintained in suspension by mechanical agitation in a batch tank.
A mixture of ozone in oxygen, containing about 14 wt. % ozone, was injected
into the aluminum hydroxide slurry at a temperature of about 23°C. The ozone was left
in contact with the slurry for about 90 minutes.
The color of the aluminum hydroxide was measured with a Hunter LabScan XE
spectrophotometer, as a function of absorbed ozone. The data are shown in the table.
The Total Organic Carbon was measured by combusting the sample and determining
the amount of carbon dioxide by infrared analysis.

Table 1 gives the results.
Total Organic Carbon ("TOC") can be reported in milligrams organic carbon
per gram of aluminum hydroxide or it can be reported in wt. % TOC which is:


The Hunter Color data indicates that the lowering of total organic carbon is
accompanied by a reduction in color.
Example 2
Aluminum hydroxide, produced according to the Bayer process, was dispersed
in water to produce a slurry containing about 332 g solids/liter of water. The pH was
adjusted to pH 12 by the addition of 33% NaOH, at a rate of about 1 milliliter per liter
of water in the slurry. The water temperature was about 22°C. The solids were

maintained in suspension by mechanical agitation in a batch tank reactor. A mixture of
room temperature ozone in oxygen, containing about
13 wt. % ozone, was injected into the aluminum hydroxide slurry. The ozone was left
in contact with the slurry for about 90 minutes. Table 2 gives the results

While the present invention is described above in connection with preferred or
illustrative embodiments, these embodiments are not intended to be exhaustive or
limiting of the invention. Rather, the invention is intended to cover all alternatives,
modifications and equivalents included within its spirit and scope, as defined by the
appended claims.

A method for the production of aluminum hydroxide, produced
using the Bayer Process, comprising producing the aluminum
hydroxide wherein the Total Organic Carbon of the aluminum
hydroxide is less than about 0.5 milligrams Total Organic
Carbon/gram of aluminum hydroxide.
The composition as claimed in claim 1 wherein the Total Organic
Carbon of the aluminum hydroxide is less than about 0.3
milligrams Total Organic Carbon/atom of aluminum.
A method for the production of aluminum hydroxide in the Bayer
Process, comprising producing said aluminum hydroxide with a
Total Organic Carbon less than about 0.5 milligrams Total Organic
Carbon/gram aluminum hydroxide; comprising the steps of:
a) dispersing the aluminum hydroxide in water, wherein the pH of
the water is greater than about 10, to create a slurry of
aluminum hydroxide in water, wherein said slurry comprises
from about 50 to about 1000 grams of solids per liter of water,
wherein the temperature of said slurry is from about 5°C to
about 95°C;
b) maintaining the solids in suspension in the slurry using any
appropriate agitation technique;
c) contacting said slurry with a mixture of ozone in oxygen

wherein the concentration of ozone in oxygen is from about 1
weight percent to about 20 weight percent and the temperature
of the ozone in oxygen mixture is from about 0°C to about
30°C; and
d) collecting the aluminum hydroxide from the slurry.
The method as claimed in claim 3 wherein the pH of the slurry is
maintained above 10 by addition of a base to said slurry, wherein
said base is selected from the group consisting of lithium
hydroxide, sodium hydroxide, potassium hydroxide, cesium
hydroxide, magnesium oxide, calcium oxide, strontium oxide,
barium oxide, and their respective hydroxides.
The method as claimed in claim 4 in which said base is selected
from the group consisting of calcium oxide, barium oxide and their
respective hydroxides; and sodium hydroxide.
The method as claimed in claim 4 in which said base is selected
from calcium oxide or barium oxide.
The process as claimed in claim 3, further comprising the steps of:
e) adding the collected aluminum hydroxide to a solution of
sodium hydroxide in water and allowing the sodium hydroxide
to digest the aluminum hydroxide;

f) adding solid aluminum hydroxide to said solution to begin
seeded precipitation of aluminum hydroxide; and
g) collecting the precipitated aluminum hydroxide, wherein said
precipitated aluminum hydroxide has a Total Organic Carbon
of less than about 0.2 mg organic carbon/gram of aluminum
hydroxide.
Dated this 19th day of December 2005.

A method for the production of aluminum hydroxide, produced using the
Bayer Process, comprising producing the aluminum hydroxide wherein the
Total Organic Carbon of the aluminum hydroxide is less than about 0.5
milligrams Total Organic Carbon/gram of aluminum hydroxide.

Documents:

2633-KOLNP-2005-FORM-27-1.1.pdf

2633-KOLNP-2005-FORM-27.pdf

2633-kolnp-2005-granted-abstract.pdf

2633-kolnp-2005-granted-assignment.pdf

2633-kolnp-2005-granted-claims.pdf

2633-kolnp-2005-granted-correspondence.pdf

2633-kolnp-2005-granted-description (complete).pdf

2633-kolnp-2005-granted-examination report.pdf

2633-kolnp-2005-granted-form 1.pdf

2633-kolnp-2005-granted-form 13.pdf

2633-kolnp-2005-granted-form 18.pdf

2633-kolnp-2005-granted-form 2.pdf

2633-kolnp-2005-granted-form 26.pdf

2633-kolnp-2005-granted-form 3.pdf

2633-kolnp-2005-granted-form 5.pdf

2633-kolnp-2005-granted-reply to examination report.pdf

2633-kolnp-2005-granted-specification.pdf


Patent Number 228397
Indian Patent Application Number 2633/KOLNP/2005
PG Journal Number 06/2009
Publication Date 06-Feb-2009
Grant Date 04-Feb-2009
Date of Filing 19-Dec-2005
Name of Patentee NALCO COMPANY
Applicant Address 1601 DIEHL ROAD, NAPERVILLE, ILLINOIS
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 MALITO, JOHN, T 241 ISLEVIEW DRIVE, OSWEGO, IL 60543
PCT International Classification Number C01F 7/00
PCT International Application Number PCT/US2003/024514
PCT International Filing date 2003-08-04
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 10/610,379 2005-06-30 U.S.A.