Conversion of Harmful Fly Ash Residue to Zeolites: Innovative Processes Focusing on Maximum Activation, Extraction, and Utilization of Aluminosilicate

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Abstract

Reuse of the solid residue from coal fly ash alumina extraction (FAAE) by acid leaching is problematic. Conversion of this solid residue into aluminum-rich zeolite (13X) and silicon-rich zeolite (ZSM-5) was investigated in this research. The FAAE residue was activated by alkali roasting with Na2CO3powder (110% mass fraction) at 890 °C for 60 min. Silicon and aluminum were mainly present as two mineral phases, Na2SiO3and NaAlSiO4, respectively, in the product obtained after roasting. The roasted product was dissolved in water (liquid/solid ratio of 2) after 20 min at 100 °C. The water-leaching liquor was investigated for total conversion to aluminosilicate zeolites without external aluminum or silicon addition. Hydrothermal synthesis of aluminum-rich zeolite 13X was successful after fine tuning of the conditions, although the filtrate had an unusually high SiO2/Al2O3molar ratio. Production of 13X consumed a large amount of aluminum, which increased the Si/Al ratio to a level suitable for synthesis of ZSM-5. The synthesis of ZSM-5 from the mother liquor of 13X was proved feasible. The FAAE residue was transformed into high-value zeolite products by nearly 100%. Additionally, the tail liquid of this process, mainly containing Na2CO3, was completely recycled. This process could be used to realize high-efficiency and high-value utilization of similar aluminosilicate solid wastes.

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APA

Liu, H. (2022). Conversion of Harmful Fly Ash Residue to Zeolites: Innovative Processes Focusing on Maximum Activation, Extraction, and Utilization of Aluminosilicate. ACS Omega, 7(23), 20347–20356. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.2c02388

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