The Solvent Extraction of Uranium from Slurries
 
    
    - Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 29
- File Size:
- 1366 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1969
Abstract
A great range of contacting equipment is used in solvent  extraction. However, a tower filled with a regular packing offers  many advantages in the direct extraction from slurries. A study was made of the flow of a dense slurry through a  packed tower in which the continuous phase was kerosene. The grid  type packing, which was preferentially wetted by the slurry, had  slats inclined at an angle of 30¦, to the horizontal. On the sur- face of the slats there were uniformly spaced longitudinal indentat- ions. These were of a height slightly less than the film thickness  and divided the slurry discharging from the bottom of the slats into  a number of uniform streams. When slurry entered the tower it was distributed by means of a troughs and weirs type of distributor. Because of the relatively  high slurry velocities that occur at the entry region, it was necess- ary to have the distributor and the first two grids above the solvent  level. The interface at the bottom of the tower was located at the mid-point of the bottom grid, so that the slurry entered the  interface as a continuous film across the full width of the slats. Using the above system, stable flow with low entrainment  was achieved at slurry flow rates of 3.4 mis/cm/sec. This would  be equivalent to a flow rate of 177 gallons per minute through a  tower of cross-section 4 ft 4 in. by 4 ft 10 in., or 1200 tons per  day of solids of specific gravity 2.6 when the pulp density was 65  per cent. Previous tests indicated that a total tower height of  about 30 ft would be required for a recovery of better than 99 per  cent.
Citation
APA: (1969) The Solvent Extraction of Uranium from Slurries
MLA: The Solvent Extraction of Uranium from Slurries. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1969.
