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1.
Cryst Growth Des ; 23(9): 6491-6505, 2023 Sep 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37692336

ABSTRACT

Magnesium hydroxide, Mg(OH)2, is an inorganic compound extensively employed in several industrial sectors. Nowadays, it is mostly produced from magnesium-rich minerals. Nevertheless, magnesium-rich solutions, such as natural and industrial brines, could prove to be a great treasure. In this work, synthetic magnesium chloride and sodium hydroxide (NaOH) solutions were used to recover Mg(OH)2 by reactive crystallization. A detailed experimental campaign was conducted aiming at producing grown Mg(OH)2 hexagonal platelets. Experiments were carried out in a stirred tank crystallizer operated in single- and double-feed configurations. In the single-feed configuration, globular and nanoflakes primary particles were obtained, as always reported in the literature when NaOH is used as a precipitant. However, these products are not complying with flame-retardant applications that require large hexagonal Mg(OH)2 platelets. This work suggests an effective precipitation strategy to favor crystal growth while, at the same time, limiting the nucleation mechanism. The double-feed configuration allowed the synthesis of grown Mg(OH)2 hexagonal platelets. The influence of reactant flow rates, reactant concentrations, and reaction temperature was analyzed. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) pictures were also taken to investigate the morphology of Mg(OH)2 crystals. The proposed precipitation strategy paves the road to satisfy flame-retardant market requirements.

2.
Cryst Growth Des ; 23(7): 4748-4759, 2023 Jul 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37426548

ABSTRACT

Magnesium is a critical raw material and its recovery as Mg(OH)2 from saltwork brines can be realized via precipitation. The effective design, optimization, and scale-up of such a process require the development of a computational model accounting for the effect of fluid dynamics, homogeneous and heterogeneous nucleation, molecular growth, and aggregation. The unknown kinetics parameters are inferred and validated in this work by using experimental data produced with a T2mm-mixer and a T3mm-mixer, guaranteeing fast and efficient mixing. The flow field in the T-mixers is fully characterized by using the k-ε turbulence model implemented in the computational fluid dynamics (CFD) code OpenFOAM. The model is based on a simplified plug flow reactor model, instructed by detailed CFD simulations. It incorporates Bromley's activity coefficient correction and a micro-mixing model for the calculation of the supersaturation ratio. The population balance equation is solved by exploiting the quadrature method of moments, and mass balances are used for updating the reactive ions concentrations, accounting for the precipitated solid. To avoid unphysical results, global constrained optimization is used for kinetics parameters identification, exploiting experimentally measured particle size distribution (PSD). The inferred kinetics set is validated by comparing PSDs at different operative conditions both in the T2mm-mixer and the T3mm-mixer. The developed computational model, including the kinetics parameters estimated for the first time in this work, will be used for the design of a prototype for the industrial precipitation of Mg(OH)2 from saltwork brines in an industrial environment.

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