The
Kroll process is a
pyrometallurgical industrial process used
to produce metallic
titanium. It was
invented by
William J. Kroll in Luxembourg
. After moving to the United States, Kroll
further developed the method for the production of
zirconium. The Kroll process replaced the
Hunter process for almost all commercial
production.
Process
Refined
rutile (or
ilmenite) from the ore is reduced with
petroleum-derived coke in a fluidized bed reactor at 1000 °C. The
mixture is then treated with
chlorine gas,
affording
titanium
tetrachloride TiCl
4 and other volatile chlorides,
which are subsequently separated by continuous
fractional distillation. In a
separate reactor, the TiCl
4 is reduced by liquid
magnesium (15-20% excess) at 800-850 °C in a
stainless steel retort to ensure complete
reduction:
- 2Mg(l) + TiCl4(g) → 2MgCl2(l) + Ti(s) [T = 800-850 °C]
Complications result from partial reduction of the titanium to its
lower chlorides
TiCl2 and
TiCl3. The
MgCl2 can be further refined
back to magnesium. The resulting porous metallic titanium sponge is
purified by
leaching or heated
vacuum distillation. The sponge
is jackhammered out, crushed, and pressed before it is melted in a
consumable electrode vacuum
arc
furnace. The melted
ingot is allowed to
solidify under
vacuum. It is often remelted
to remove inclusions and ensure uniformity. These melting steps add
to the cost of the product. Titanium is about six times as
expensive as stainless steel.
History and subsequent developments
Many methods have been applied to the production of titanium metal,
beginning with a report in 1887 by Nilsen and Pettersen using
sodium, which was optimized into the commercial
Hunter process. In the 1920's van Arkel had
described the thermal decomposition of
titanium tetraiodide to give highly
pure titanium. Titanium tetrachloride was found to reduce with
hydrogen at high temperatures to give
hydrides that can be thermally processed to the pure metal. With
this background, Kroll developed both new reductants and new
apparatus for the reduction of titanium tetrachloride. Its high
reactivity toward trace amounts of water and other metal oxides
presented challenges. Significant success came with the use of
calcium as a reductant, but the resulting still contained
significant oxide impurities. Major success using magnesium at 1000
°C using a molybdenum clad reactor, as reported to the
Electrochemcal Society in Ottawa. Kroll's titanium was highly
ductile reflecting its high purity. The Kroll process displaced the
Hunter process and continues to be the dominant technology for the
production of titanium metal, as well as driving the majority of
the world's production of magnesium metal.
Other technologies are competing with the Kroll process. One
process involves
electrolysis of a
molten salt. Problems with this process
include "redox recycling," the failure of the diaphragm, and
dendritic deposition in the electrolyte solution. Another process,
the
FFC Cambridge process, has
been patented for a solid electrolytic solution, and its
implementation would eliminate the titanium-sponge processing. Also
in development is a pyrometallurgical route that involves the
reduction of an intermediate form of titanium with aluminium. It
combines the advantages of pyrometallurgy and a cheap
reductant.
See also
References
Further reading
- P.Kar, Mathematical modeling of phase change electrodes with
application to the FFC process, PhD thesis; UC, Berkeley,
2007.