The present invention relates to systems and processes for producing sodium bicarbonate crystals.
The present invention, in one embodiment, relates to a method for producing sodium bicarbonate crystals. Raw sodium carbonate containing silica is subjected to a pre-treatment process. The pre-treatment process produces a sodium carbonate solution that is then subjected to a sodium bicarbonate crystallization process. In the sodium bicarbonate crystallization process, a concentrate is produced and the concentrate includes sodium bicarbonate crystals. The concentrate, along with the sodium bicarbonate crystals, is separated, yielding a mother liquor. The mother liquor is recycled and mixed with the sodium carbonate either during pre-treatment or upstream from pre-treatment. However, before the mother liquor is mixed with the sodium carbonate, silica is removed from the mother liquor. In one embodiment, this is achieved by mixing an aluminum salt with the mother liquor. This precipitates hydrous aluminum oxide. Silica in the mother liquor is adsorbed onto the hydrous aluminum oxide. Hydrous aluminum oxide with adsorbed silica is removed from the mother liquor. Thereafter, the treated mother liquor is appropriately mixed with the sodium carbonate.
In one embodiment, the present invention entails a process for producing sodium bicarbonate crystals. The process entails mixing sodium carbonate containing silica and derived from TRONA ore with a treated mother liquor produced in a downstream process to form a sodium carbonate solution. The sodium carbonate solution is filtered to form or produce a sodium carbonate filtrate. Sodium bicarbonate crystals are formed in the sodium carbonate filtrate. After forming the sodium bicarbonate crystals, the sodium carbonate filtrate having the sodium bicarbonate crystals therein is subjected to a solids-liquid separation process which produces a concentrate that contains the sodium bicarbonate crystals and a mother liquor containing silica. The mother liquor containing silica is directed to a reactor. In the reactor, an aluminum salt is mixed with the mother liquor. This precipitates hydrous aluminum oxide and the silica in the mother liquor is adsorbed onto the hydrous aluminum oxide. The process further includes separating the hydrous aluminum oxide with the adsorbed silica from the mother liquor. This forms the treated mother liquor. It is the treated mother liquor that is mixed with the sodium carbonate to form the sodium carbonate solution.
Other objects and advantages of the present invention will become apparent and obvious from a study of the following description and the accompanying drawings which are merely illustrative of such invention.
The present invention relates to a process for producing sodium bicarbonate crystals from raw sodium carbonate. One exemplary process is illustrated in
The process begins with a source of sodium carbonate, sometimes referred to as soda ash. In this exemplary embodiment, the sodium carbonate is derived from TRONA ore. TRONA ore is a naturally occurring mineral that is chemically known as sodium sesquicarbonate (Na2CO3.NaHCO3.2H2O). The sodium carbonate derived from TRONA ore can be pre-treated in a number of ways, depending on the condition of the sodium carbonate and/or the application. Typically the TRONA ore is refined into a slurry of sodium sesquicarbonate, which is an intermediate sodium carbonate product that typically contains both sodium carbonate and sodium bicarbonate. Thus, in this example, the raw sodium carbonate, referred to in
With particular reference to
The sodium carbonate solution produced by the dissolver 12 is, in one embodiment, subjected to one or more filtration processes. Various filtration processes can be employed. In the embodiment illustrated in
In some cases, additional filtration may be desirable. In the
The sodium carbonate solution is then subjected to a process where at least portions of the sodium carbonate are converted to sodium bicarbonate crystals. This occurs in what is referred to in
Downstream of the crystallizer 18, the effluent from the carbonating process is subjected to one or more clarification or filtering processes where the sodium bicarbonate crystals are removed from the solution. Various clarification or filtration processes can be used. In the end, a concentrate is produced and the concentrate includes the sodium bicarbonate crystals. Also, such a clarification or filtration process produces a mother liquor. Since the raw sodium carbonate includes silica, it follows that the mother liquor will also include silica.
In the embodiment illustrated in
As
Under this process condition, hydrous aluminum oxide will be precipitated [equation 1] which has coagulating and adsorptive properties.
Al3++3OH−=Al(OH)3 (1)
Depending on the desired percent removal of silica, the mass ratio of aluminum to silica is in the range between 1:1 and 4:1. The precipitated hydrous aluminum oxide solids can be separated from the mother liquor in a Veolia Water proprietary high rate settling device (ACTIFLO™ or MULTIFLO™), conventional clarifier including a lamella separator, or in any filtration device.
After the mother liquor 27 has been mixed with the aluminum salt in the reactor 24, the mother liquor, along with the hydrous aluminum oxide having the adsorbed silica thereon, is pumped to a settler 26. This essentially entails a clarification step where the precipitated hydrous aluminum oxide, along with the adsorbed silica, are allowed to settle in the settler 26 and are separated from the mother liquor. The resulting mother liquor is directed from the settler 26 to the dissolver 12 where it is mixed with the raw sodium carbonate. The effluent or mother liquor from settler 26 is referred to herein as treated mother liquor. The term “treated mother liquor” means a mother liquor that at one point contains silica and which has been treated with an aluminum salt to precipitate hydrous aluminum oxide with adsorbed silica thereon and where hydrous aluminum oxide and adsorbed silica has been removed. As indicated in
There are many advantages to the process described above and shown in
The present invention may, of course, be carried out in other specific ways than those herein set forth without departing from the scope and the essential characteristics of the invention. The present embodiments are therefore to be construed in all aspects as illustrative and not restrictive and all changes coming within the meaning and equivalency range of the appended claims are intended to be embraced therein.
This application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. § 119(e) from the following U.S. provisional application: Application Ser. No. 62/402,247 filed on Sep. 30, 2016. That application is incorporated in its entirety by reference herein.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2017/051255 | 9/13/2017 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62402247 | Sep 2016 | US |