Effect of roasting temperature on the coal-based direct reduction of high-iron vanadium tailings
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Abstract
The effect of roasting temperature on the coal-based direct reduction of vanadium tailings was investigated by X-ray diffraction (XRD) analysis and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). A metallic iron separation test of the roasting products was done by using a grinding-magnetic separation method. It is shown that the roasting temperature of 1 200℃ is needed for the generation, merger and growing up of metallic iron and for monomer dissociation between metallic iron particles and slag phase in the roasting products. Fe2O3 in vanadium tailings is completely reduced into metal iron, and Fe2TiO5 is basically transformed into metallic iron and TiO2 at 1 200℃. The metal iron powder with a total iron mass fraction of 90.90% and a TiO2 mass fraction of 0.56% is obtained from roasting products of vanadium tailings with a total iron mass fraction of 36.54% and a TiO2 mass fraction of 9.28% at 1200℃ using the grinding-magnetic separation method.
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