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Overview: Secondary Aluminum Secondary Aluminum Description

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Title: Overview: Secondary Aluminum Secondary Aluminum Description


1
Overview Secondary Aluminum
2
Secondary Aluminum Description
  • Secondary aluminum smelting involves the
    production of aluminum from used aluminum
    products or process waste to recover metals by
    pretreatment, smelting and refining.
  • Most secondary aluminum recovery facilities use
    batch processing in smelting and refining
    operations.
  • Pretreatment, furnace type, feed and fluxes used
    will vary with each installation.

3
Secondary Aluminum Steps
  • Scrap Pretreatment
  • Methods Mechanical, Pyrometallurgical,
    hydrometallurgical cleaning
  • Feed process scrap, used beverage cans, foils,
    extrusions, commercial scraps, turnings, old
    rolled or cast metal, and recycled skimmings from
    the secondary smelting process.
  • Presorting of scrap into desired alloy groups
    reduces processing time.
  • Scrap contaminated with oil or coatings requires
    removal of oil to reduce emissions and improve
    melting rate
  • Salt slag is treated to recover the salt, which
    is reutilized as flux in rotary furnaces. Salt
    slag treatment residue has a high aluminum oxide
    (Al2O3) content and can be recycled using the
    Bayer process or used as an additive in the
    cement industry.
  • Charging
  • Pretreated aluminum scrap placed into a melted
    aluminum pool (heel) that is maintained in
    melting furnaces. The scrap, mixed with flux
    material, is placed into the furnace charging
    well, where heat from the molten aluminum
    surrounding the scrap causes it to melt by
    conduction.

4
Secondary Aluminum Steps
  • Smelting Furnaces
  • Reverberatory a smelting chamber heated by a
    heavy oil burner and an open well where aluminum
    scraps of various sizes are supplied
  • Rotary furnaces -horizontal cylindrical shell
    mounted on rollers and lined with refractory
    material. The furnace is fired from one end,
    usually using gas or oil as the fuel
  • Induction furnaces used to smelt cleaner aluminum
    feed materials
  • Fluxing
  • Flux materials combine with contaminates and
    float to the surface of the aluminum, trapping
    impurities and providing a barrier (up to 6
    inches thick) that reduces oxidation of the
    melted aluminum.
  • To minimize aluminum oxidation (melt loss),
    mechanical methods are used to submerge scrap
    into the heel as quickly as possible.
  • Demagging is necessary
  • Reduces the magnesium content of the molten
    charge.
  • Is accomplished by addition of chlorine, aluminum
    chloride or chlorinated organics
  • Process Cl2 (or other compounds) gas is metered
    into the circulation pump discharge pipe.

5
Secondary Aluminum Steps
  • Degassing
  • Process used to remove gases entrained in molten
    aluminum.
  • High-pressure inert gases are released below the
    molten surface to violently agitate the melt.
    This agitation causes the entrained gases to rise
    to the surface to be absorbed in the floating
    flux.
  • Alloying
  • Combines aluminum with an alloying agent in order
    to change its strength and ductility.
  • Skimming
  • Removes contaminated semisolid fluxes (dross,
    slag, or skimmings) by ladling them from the
    surface of the melt.
  • Pouring

6
Secondary Aluminum Processes
7
What are Sources of Dioxin Air Emissions?
  • Potential air pollutants Dioxins/Furans, PM,
    metal compounds, chlorides, NOx, SO2, CO,
    Ammonia, and organic compounds
  • Sources of dioxin/furan emissions
  • Incomplete combustion
  • De novo synthesis
  • The presence of oils and other organic materials
    on scrap or other sources of carbon (partially
    burnt fuels and reductants, such as coke), can
    produce fine carbon particles which react with
    inorganic chlorides or organically bound chlorine
    in the temperature range of 250 to 500 C to
    produce PCDD/PCDF.
  • Contaminants in feed include organic and chlorine
    compounds such as fluxes, hexachloroethane,
    chlorine, unburnt fuel, oils and plastics
  • Catalyzed by the presence of metals such as
    copper or iron.
  • Chemical additions - chlorine mixtures for
    degassing and demagging and chlorides in salt
    fluxes provide chlorine for potential formation
    of dioxins. Chemical additions combined with
    process conditions favorable to formation of
    dioxin/furans at temperatures between 250 and
    500 C result in emissions.

8
How are air emissions reduced?
  • Best Environmental Practices
  • Performance levels associated with best available
    techniques and best environmental practices for
    secondary aluminum smelters lt 0.5 ng I-TEQ/Nm3
    (at operating oxygen concentrations).
  • Eliminate use of artesianal and other small-scale
    aluminum recovery processes. Achievable
    performance limits are not applicable to
    artesianal and small-scale aluminum recovery
    processes.

9
How are air emissions reduced?
  • Primary Measures
  • Presorting of scrap material
  • Avoid presence of oils and other organic
    materials on scrap
  • Current Methods swarf centrifuge, swarf drying,
    or thermal decoating followed by afterburning
  • New Method being tested employ laser and eddy
    technology
  • Use high-temperature advanced furnaces
  • Reverberatory furnace
  • Rotary and tilting rotary furnace
  • Induction furnace
  • Shaft furnace

10
How are air emissions reduced?
  • Primary Measures
  • Good operation conditions in furnaces
  • Maintain furnace temperatures gt 850 C to destroy
    dioxins/furans
  • Monitor emissions if possible, temperature,
    residence time, gas components, and fume damper
    controls
  • Choice of Demagging and Degassing Agents
  • Minimize formation of chlorine compounds, ex. use
    mixtures of chlorine and inert gases
  • Avoid use of hexachloroethane and maintain
    careful control over demagging
  • Use potassium fluoride or potassium aluminum
    fluoride as a degassing agent instead of chlorine

11
How are air emissions reduced?
  • Secondary Measures Pollutant control measures
  • Fume and gas collection for all processes
  • Sealed feeding systems and sealed furnaces
  • Control of fugitves by maintaining negative air
    pressure in furnace to prevent fugitive leaks
  • Gas collection use of furnace or reactor
    enclosures
  • Use of hooding if sealed enclosures are not
    possible
  • High efficiency PM removal dioxin/furan adsorb
    on PM
  • Collected PM should be treated in high
    temperature furnaces to remove dioxins/furans
  • Methods high-efficiency fabric filters, ceramic
    filters, wet and dry scrubbers
  • Use of catalytic coating on fabric filter bags
    destroys dioxins/furans by oxidation
  • Afterburners and Quenching
  • Afterburners with rapid quench are used to
    destroy organic materials that escape the
    combustion zone
  • Operate afterburners at temperatures gt 950 C
    followed by rapid quenching to temperatures lt
    250C to prevent dioxin reformation. High
    temperature afterburners destroy dioxins/furans
    rapid quenching prevents reformation of
    dioxins/furans.
  • Rapid quenching also reduces amount of wastes to
    be treated by scrubbers resulting in economic
    savings

12
How are air emissions reduced?
  • Secondary Measures Pollutant control measures
  • Adsorption on Activated Carbon
  • Dioxin/furans adsorb onto activated carbon Ideal
    due large surface area for adsorption
  • Treatment with activated carbon using fixed or
    moving bed reactors
  • Injection materials such as lime, sodium
    bicarbonate and carbon into gas stream followed
    by high-efficiency PM removal measures such as
    fabric filters
  • Catalytic oxidation emerging research
  • Transforms organic compounds into H2O, CO2, and
    HCl using a precious metal catalyst
  • Off-gases should have PM removal prior to this
    measure
  • 99 effective, shorter residence times, lower
    energy consumption
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