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Sulphuric acid modem process

The production of sulphuric acid by the contact process, introduced in about 1875, was the first process of industrial significance to utilize heterogeneous catalysts. In this process, SO2 was oxidized on a platinum catalyst to S03, which was subsequently absorbed in aqueous sulphuric acid. Later, the platinum catalyst was superseded by a catalyst containing vanadium oxide and alkali-metal sulphates on a silica carrier, which was cheaper and less prone to poisoning. Further development of the vanadium catalysts over the last decades has led to highly optimized modem sulphuric acid catalysts, which are all based on the vanadium-alkali sulphate system. [Pg.312]

Sulphuric acid is the largest volume chemical in the world with an annual production of about 180 mill, t/year which is used primarily for phosphate fertilizers, petroleum alkylation, copper ore leaching and in smaller quantities for a number of other purposes (pulp and paper, other acids, aluminium, titanium dioxide, plastics, synthetic fibres, dyestuffs, sulphonation etc.). The major sulphur sources for sulphuric acid production are sulphur recovered from hydrocarbon processing in the refineries and from desulphurisation of natural gas, SO2 from metallurgical smelter operations, spent alkylation acid, and to a minor extent mined elemental sulphur and pyrites. A simplified flow sheet of a modem double-absorption plant for sulphuric acid production from sulphur is shown in Fig. 1. [Pg.312]

A. Philips, The modem sulphuric acid process. Chemistry in Britain, 13, 471, 1977. [Pg.249]

Thiosulphate (S2O3 ) was the original sulphur source in early CD processes, and, while less commonly nsed nowadays, it still has a place in the modem CD literature. It is most commonly nsed in somewhat acidic solutions, al-thongh it has also been employed in alkaline solntion. Thiosulphate is unstable in fairly acidic solutions and decomposes to give elemental sulphur, e.g.. [Pg.47]


See other pages where Sulphuric acid modem process is mentioned: [Pg.506]    [Pg.23]    [Pg.24]    [Pg.246]    [Pg.68]    [Pg.215]    [Pg.684]    [Pg.205]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.35 , Pg.36 ]




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