PRODUCTION OF TITANIUM TRIFLUORIDE

Abstract
A method for the production of titanium trifluoride from a titanium-containing material, includes the steps of producing a fluoride solution of Ti(IV) from the titanium-containing material and reducing the Ti(IV) in the solution with a transition metal or an alloy of the transition metal. The transition metal is selected from manganese, iron, cobalt, nickel and zinc. An ammonium containing salt and either ammonia or ammonium fluoride are added to the resulting solution containing Ti(III) to produce a precipitate, and the precipitate is pyrolysed to produce titanium trifluoride.
Description

THIS INVENTION relates to the production of titanium trifluoride (TiF3).


As described in WO 2006/079887 A2, TiF3 is a preferred intermediate to produce Ti metal after reduction with reducing agents like Al, Mg, Na or Ca.


The present invention provides an efficient and inexpensive process for the production of titanium trifluoride.


The Applicant is aware of WO 2006/079887 A2 in which TiF3 is produced from titanium-containing materials such as ilmenite by the reduction of (NH4)2TiF6. However, this process requires the reduction of Ti(IV) with aluminium and is, accordingly, a more expensive process than that of the present invention. The method of the present invention provides an inexpensive process for reducing Ti(IV) to Ti(III).


In acid conditions, transition metals M and alloys thereof, in which M may be manganese, iron, cobalt, nickel or zinc can reduce Ti(IV) to Ti(III). Further, because these metals have a lower affinity for fluoride ions than titanium, it is possible to form NH4TiF4 or other fluoride complexes without interference from M. However, the M2+ ion has to be stabilized to prevent it from oxidation and co-precipitation. The Applicant has found that oxidation and co-precipitation of the metal can be prevented by the formation of an ammonium double salt (NH4)2MCl4 by adding NH4Cl (about 4.4 mol per mol of M2+) or (NH4)2SO4 (about 2.2 mol per mol of M2+) to the reduction solution.


The Applicant has found that a buffering solution results with the addition of NH4OH or NH4F which stabilizes the pH of the reduction solution at between 4-5. It is postulated that under these conditions, NH4OH or NH4F forms an unusual complex, NH4TiF4.NH4OH or NH4TiF4.NH4F which precipitates from the solution. This complex is stable even when dried. The M2+ can then be washed from this complex to leave a clean precursor which can be decomposed to produce TiF3.


According to a first aspect of the invention, there is provided a method for the production of titanium trifluoride from a titanium-containing material, the method including the steps of

    • producing a fluoride solution of Ti(IV) from the titanium-containing material,
    • reducing the Ti(IV) in the solution with a transition metal or an alloy of the transition metal, in which the transition metal is selected from manganese, iron, cobalt, nickel and zinc to produce a solution containing Ti(III),
    • adding an ammonium containing salt and either ammonia or ammonium fluoride or a mixture thereof to the solution containing Ti(III) to produce a precipitate, and
    • pyrolising the precipitate to produce titanium trifluoride.


The above metals all have redox potentials which favour the reduction of Ti(IV) to Ti(III) and produce M2+ under the conditions of the reduction. They also form the ammonium double salt (NH4)2MCl4 on addition of NH4Cl or (NH4)2SO4 in the ratios as set out above.


Producing the solution of Ti(IV) from the titanium-containing material may be by digesting the material in an aqueous solution of HF, The ammonium containing salt may be ammonium chloride. Without being bound by theory, the applicant believes that the precipitate is either NH4TiF4.NH4OH or NH4TiF4.NH4F respectively.


The titanium-containing material may be selected from titanium oxides, hydroxides and sulphates, including materials such as rutile, anatase, brookite, pseudo-brookite, and leucoxene, which are all TiO2 containing materials, and titaniferous slags. Titaniferous slag is a TiO2-containing material produced largely from the smelting of ilmenite. Ilmenite (FeTiO3) may also be used in the method of the invention but would require larger amounts of HF and would produce larger amounts of by products.


The method may include reducing the Ti(IV) with iron. The iron may be in the form of iron plates, lumps, powder, iron-containing alloys and the like.


The concentration of the aqueous HF solution may be between about 5-60%, preferably between about 10-30% and, more preferably between about 15 and 25%.


The invention extends to titanium trifluoride prepared by a method as herein described.


The invention extends further to titanium metal prepared from titanium trifluoride produced by a method as herein described.


The invention extends further to the complex salt NH4TiF4.NH4OH.


The invention is now described, by way of example, with reference to the following Example and FIG. 1 which shows the reduction of TiF4 to TiF3.







EXAMPLE 1
Production of TiF3 Using Iron as the Reducing Agent

In a 5 l polypropylene beaker, HF (2400 g, 40%) was diluted with tap water (2100 g). Anatase pulp (1.25 kg, approximately 50% Ti) was slowly added to the diluted acid with stirring. The dissolution reaction was exothermic and the temperature rose to 60-70° C. After about one hour, the excess pulp was filtered from the solution.





TiO(OH)2(s)+4HF(aq)→TiF4(aq)+2H2O


The aqueous TiF4 leachate was then standardized. An excess of (NH4)2CO3 was slowly added to a sample of the leachate (75 g) in an alumina crucible (250 ml) until no further white precipitate formed. The precipitate was heated to dryness on a hot plate and the crucible was placed in a furnace at 1000° C. After decomposition (at which point no further fuming took place) the yield of TiO2, after cooling was 10.2 g, indicating that 587.5 g of leachate is required to produce 1 mol of TiO2 (79.9 g).


The leachate (2940 g, equal to 5 mol TiO2), was diluted with tap water (980 g) in a 5 l polypropylene beaker. While slowly stirring, two mild steel plates were lowered into the solution. The total surface submersed in the solution was approximately 3000 cm2. Although 40% of the reaction had completed within the first two hours, the reaction was left overnight (18 h) to complete. The reduction of Ti(IV) with iron does not proceed further than Ti(III). The mild steel plates were lifted from the dark green solution, dried and weighed. It was found that 147.6 g (2.643 mol) iron had dissolved.


To stabilize the Fe(II) in solution, 4.4 mol NH4Cl (10% excess) was added with stirring (2.643×4.4×53.5 g /mol=622 g NH4Cl) for each mol of iron to form the double salt (NH4)2FeCl4. After 30 minutes, when all the NH4Cl had dissolved, aqueous ammonia (NH4OH) was slowly added to the solution. It was found that 2.5 mol NH4OH (496 ml, 25% solution) added to 1 mol Fe(II) under these conditions resulted in a high yield of a violet precipitate of (what is believed to be) NH4TiF4.NH4OH without co-precipitation of Fe(II) [(2.643×2.5×75 ml/mol NH4OH (25%)]. After 30 minutes the precipitate was filtered and the filter cake was washed with 0.01 N acetic acid solution until the filtrate was clear. The precipitate was then dried at 70° C. to produce a violet cake (846.6 g). A portion of the cake (50 g) was decomposed under N2 in an alumina crucible with a graphite lid for 12 hours at 550° C. A strong smell of ammonia was noted and after cooling, a dark brown powder (29.6 g) was produced which was shown by XRD and XRF analysis to be TiF3.


The mass loss of 40.8% implied that 846.6 g of the violet precursor yielded 501.2 g TiF3. With a molar mass of 104.9 g, this was equal to 4.78 mol TiF3, obtained from 5 mol TiF4 leachate (95.6% efficiency).


The buffer system (excess NH4Cl and NH4OH) improved the stability of pH 4-5 during the NH4OH addition and improved the yield without co-precipitation of the Fe(II).


The mass of TiF3 (104.9 g/mol) obtained by decomposition of (what is believed to be) NH4TiF4.NH4OH, (176.9 g/mol) is theoretically 59.3%. The yield of TiF3 obtained was 59.2%, indicating an almost quantitive conversion.


EXAMPLE 2
Production of TiF3 Using Manganese, Cobalt, Nickel or Zinc

Reductions were carried out on the leachate of Example 1 using, respectively, manganese, cobalt, nickel and zinc as the reducing agent to produce TiF3.


In the case of reduction with iron, the off gases formed during the decomposition of the precipitate were scrubbed with slaked lime to form CaF2 and NH4OH. The (NH4)2FeCl4 stream is the same as that described in WO 2006/079887 A2, but produces approximately 50% less Fe per unit of Ti.


The NH4Cl did not need to be purified or crystallized, it was added as a saturated solution and water was added for the NH4Cl to dissolve.


Particularly, in the case of iron, the advantages of the method of the present invention over those of the process described in WO 2006/079887 A2 are:

    • i) crude anatase can be used,
    • ii) Fe is a much cheaper reducing agent than Al powder,
    • iii) there is a 35% saving in HF cost (4 mol HF per Ti instead of 6 mol),
    • iv) the amount of CaF2 and Fe which has to be removed in the recycling loops is approximately 50% less than that of the WO 2006/079887 A2 process,
    • v) NH4Cl can be recycled as a saturated solution instead of as a dry powder, and
    • vi) 25% less AlF3 needs to be sublimed in the final product.


The process described in WO 2006/079887 A2 produces a mixture of TiF3 (75-80 wt %) and AlF3 (25-20 wt %) from (NH4)2TiF6 via Al reduction. Like titanium, aluminium also has a high affinity for fluoride. This results in the co-precipitation of (NH4)3AlF6 with NH4TiF4 during reduction when Al competes against Ti for fluoride ions. When this mixture of precursors is decomposed it results in a TiF3-AlF3 mixture. The method of the present invention produces a pure TiF3 product using Fe as a reducing agent.

Claims
  • 1. A method for the production of titanium trifluoride from a titanium-containing material, the method producing a fluoride solution of Ti(IV) from the titanium-containing material,reducing the Ti(IV) in the solution with a transition metal or an alloy of the transition metal, in which the transition metal is selected from the group consisting of manganese, iron, cobalt, nickel and zinc to produce a solution containing Ti(III),adding an ammonium containing salt and either ammonia or ammonium fluoride or a mixture thereof to the solution containing Ti(III) to produce a precipitate, andpyrolising the precipitate to produce titanium trifluoride.
  • 2. The method as claimed in claim 1, in which the solution of Ti(IV) is produced from the titanium-containing material by digesting the titanium-containing material in an aqueous solution of HF.
  • 3. The method as claimed in claim 1, in which the ammonium containing salt is ammonium chloride.
  • 4. The method as claimed in claim 1, in which the titanium-containing material is selected from the group consisting of titanium oxides, titanium hydroxides, titanium sulphates and titaniferous slags.
  • 5. The method as claimed in claim 4, in which the titanium-containing material is selected from the group consisting of rutile, anatase, brookite, pseudo-brookite, leucoxene and ilmenite
  • 6. The method as claimed in claim 1, in which the Ti(IV) is reduced with iron or an iron containing alloy.
  • 7. The method as claimed in claim 1, in which the concentration of the aqueous HF solution is between about 5 and 60%
  • 8. The method as claimed in claim 7, in which the concentration of the aqueous HF solution is between about 10 and 30%.
  • 9. The method as claimed in claim 8, in which the concentration of the aqueous HF solution is between about 15-25%.
  • 10. A complex salt comprising NH4TiF4.NH4OH.
  • 11. Titanium trifluoride prepared by a method as claimed in claim 1.
  • 12. Titanium metal prepared from titanium trifluoride produced by a method as claimed in claim 1.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
2008/00404 Jan 2008 ZA national
PCT Information
Filing Document Filing Date Country Kind 371c Date
PCT/IB2008/055559 12/29/2008 WO 00 7/7/2010