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Vanadates aluminium

It must also be pointed out that other basic materials have been synthesized which present no surface oxygens and hydroxyls, but other types of active sites whose exact nature remains controversial. These type of solids are, for example, impregnated imides and nitrides on zeolites and alumina, amorphous oxynitrides obtained by treatment with ammonia or aluminium orthophosphate, zirconium phosphate, aluminium vanadate or galloaluminophosphate, and KF supported on alumina/1,3,41 One of the main advantages of these solids with respect to basic oxides is their resistance to carbon dioxide or water. [Pg.172]

The usual extraction procedure is to roast the crushed ore, or vanadium residue, with NaCl or Na2C03 at 850°C. This produces sodium vanadate, NaV03, which is leached out with water. Acidification with sulfuric acid to pH 2-3 precipitates red cake , a polyvanadate which, on fusing at 700°C, gives a black, technical grade vanadium pentoxide. Reduction is then necessary to obtain the metal, but, since about 80% of vanadium produced is used as an additive to steel, it is usual to effect the reduction in an electric furnace in the presence of iron or iron ore to produce ferrovanadium, which can then be used without further refinement. Carbon was formerly used as the reductant, but it is difficult to avoid the formation of an intractable carbide, and so it has been superseded by aluminium or, more commonly, ferrosilicon (p. 330) in which case lime is also added to remove the silica as a slag of calcium silicate. If pure vanadium metal is required it can... [Pg.977]

H. 8-Hydroxyquinaldine (XI). The reactions of 8-hydroxyquinaldine are, in general, similar to 8-hydroxyquinoline described under (C) above, but unlike the latter it does not produce an insoluble complex with aluminium. In acetic acid-acetate solution precipitates are formed with bismuth, cadmium, copper, iron(II) and iron(III), chromium, manganese, nickel, silver, zinc, titanium (Ti02 + ), molybdate, tungstate, and vanadate. The same ions are precipitated in ammoniacal solution with the exception of molybdate, tungstate, and vanadate, but with the addition of lead, calcium, strontium, and magnesium aluminium is not precipitated, but tartrate must be added to prevent the separation of aluminium hydroxide. [Pg.444]

Phosphate, arsenate, and vanadate interfere. Borate, fluoride, and large amounts of aluminium, calcium, magnesium, and the alkali metals have no effect in the determination, but large amounts of iron (> 5 per cent) appear to produce slightly low results. [Pg.488]

Some oxide-type minerals have been found to luminesce when irradiated. A simple example is ruby (aluminium oxide with chromium activator), which emits bright-red light. The phosphors are incorporated into colour television screens to emit the colours blue (silver-activated zinc sulphide), green (manganese-activated zinc orthosilicate), and red (europium-activated yttrium vanadate). [Pg.477]

V. In sedimentary rocks. These minerals also contain oxidised vanadium, and consist of vanadates of iron, aluminium, lead, copper, etc. The carnotite deposits of Colorado are of this type. [Pg.11]

B. Wet Processes.—These vary considerably in detail according to the nature and amount of constituents other than vanadium in the ore. An outline of the operations involved in the case of patronite is as follows The ore is roasted with common salt or sodium carbonate and then extracted either (a) with water to give an alkaline solution of sodium vanadate and soluble vanadates of other metals, any lead, zinc, copper, etc., being left in the residue or (b) with sulphuric acid to produce a solution of vanadyl sulphate. Acid extraction is usually employed when the vanadium content of the material is low. The alkaline extract from (a) is treated with excess of sodium carbonate in order to precipitate calcium and aluminium, after removal of which,... [Pg.14]

For the treatment of camotite several methods are available. The method recommended by the United States Bureau of Mines2 is as follows The ore is leached with concentrated nitric acid at 100° C., neutralised with caustic soda, and barium chloride and sulphuric acid added to the solution to precipitate the radium as barium-radium sulphate. The precipitate settles in three or four days, after which time the clear liquid is decanted into tanks and is treated with excess of boiling sodium carbonate solution in order to precipitate any iron, aluminium and chromium present. The solution now contains sodium uranyl carbonate and sodium vanadate. It is nearly neutralised with nitric acid, and caustic soda is added in sufficient quantity to precipitate the uranium as sodium uranate. After filtering, the remaining solution is neutralised with nitric acid and ferrous sulphate added, whereupon iron vanadate is thrown down. By this method it is claimed that 90 per cent, of the radium, all the uranium, and 50 per cent, of the vanadium in the camotite are recovered. [Pg.15]

The comparatively high heat of formation of vanadium pentoxide and the tendency of aluminium to alloy with metallic vanadium explain the non-success of the application of the thermite process for the production of pure vanadium from the pentoxide and from vanadates. [Pg.32]

Aluminium Metavanadate, AI(V03)3, may be prepared eleetro-lytieally or by the addition of an aluminium salt in solution to an alkali vanadate.2... [Pg.71]

The complex with ADP and aluminium fluoride is thought to resemble the early ADP.Pi state immediately after hydrolysis, whereas the complex with ADP and vanadate may represent a late state in which the phosphate (mimicked by vanadate) has moved quite a long distance (15 A) from the active center to the surface of the motor domain. There it is fixed by two hydrogen bonds to the solvent exposed tips of the switch-1 loop region (L9) at one side and the switch-2 loop (Lll) at the other side. [Pg.316]


See other pages where Vanadates aluminium is mentioned: [Pg.461]    [Pg.461]    [Pg.207]    [Pg.29]    [Pg.30]    [Pg.54]    [Pg.59]    [Pg.71]    [Pg.109]    [Pg.110]    [Pg.112]    [Pg.158]    [Pg.200]    [Pg.316]    [Pg.309]    [Pg.232]    [Pg.339]    [Pg.344]   
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