Bayer process
The
Bayer process is the principal industrial means of producing
alumina, itself important in the
Hall-Héroult process for producing
aluminum.
Bauxite, the most important ore of aluminum, contains only 40-60%
alumina, Al
2O
3, the rest being a mixture of
silica, various
iron oxides, and
titanium dioxide. The alumina must be purified before it can be refined to aluminum metal. In the Bayer process, bauxite is washed with a hot solution of
sodium hydroxide, NaOH, at 250°C. This converts the alumina to
aluminium hydroxide, Al(OH)
3, which dissolves in the hydroxide solution according to the
chemical equationAl2O3 + 2
OH- + 3
H2O â†' 2 [Al(OH)
4]
-The other components of bauxite do not dissolve and can be filtered out as solid impurities. Next, the hydroxide solution is cooled, and the aluminium hydroxide dissolved in it precipitates out as a white, fluffy solid. When then heated to 1050°C, the aluminium hydroxide decomposes to alumina, giving off water vapor in the process:
2
Al(OH)3 â†'
Al2O3 + 3
H2OThe Bayer process was invented in 1888 by the Austrian chemist
Karl Bayer. Working in Saint Petersburg, Russia to develop a method for supplying
alumina to the textile industry (it was used as a mordant in dyeing cotton), Bayer discovered in 1887 that the
aluminium hydroxide that precipitated from alkaline solution was crystalline and could be easily filtered and washed, while that precipitated from acid medium by neutralization was gelatinous and difficult to wash.
A few years earlier, Louis Le Chatelier in France developed a method for making
alumina by heating bauxite in sodium carbonate, Na
2CO
3, at 1200°C, leaching the sodium aluminate formed with water, then precipitating
aluminium hydroxide by
carbon dioxide, CO
2, which was then filtered and dried. This process was abandoned in favor of the Bayer process.
The process began to gain importance in metallurgy together with the invention of the electrolytic aluminum process invented in 1886. Together with the cyanidation process invented in 1887, the Bayer process marks the birth of the modern field of
hydrometallurgyToday, the process is virtually unchanged and it produces nearly all the world's alumina supply as an intermediate in aluminum production.
*Habashi, F. "A short history of hydrometallurgy",
Hydrometallurgy 79, pp. 15-22, 2005.