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Formation Mechanism of Ferronickel Alloy Due to...
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Formation Mechanism of Ferronickel Alloy Due to the Reaction Between Iron and Nickeliferous Pyrrhotite at 850–900 °C

Abstract

A thermal upgrading process by which nickel value can be concentrated in a ferronickel alloy is a possible alternative to treat Sudbury pyrrhotite (Po) tailings with nickel content of 0.5–1.5 wt%. The basis of this process is precipitation of Ni from Po at high temperature once Fe/S ratio in the iron-deficient Po is shifted towards stoichiometric or near stoichiometric FeS (troilite) either by the addition of iron and/or the removal of sulfur. For the iron addition route, the reaction between elemental iron and nickeliferous pyrrhotite to produce ferronickel alloy and Ni-depleted ironsulfide phase plays a critical rule. In this paper, the formation mechanism of ferronickel alloy was investigated using the diffusion couple technique to better understand the nickel diffusion behavior in the iron and sulfide phases.

Authors

Liu F; Barati M; Marcuson S

Book title

Extraction 2018

Series

The Minerals, Metals & Materials Series

Pagination

pp. 415-425

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

January 1, 2018

DOI

10.1007/978-3-319-95022-8_33
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