UDK 622.354:621.785 ISSN 1580-2949 Izvirni znanstveni članek MTAEC9, 39(6)225(2005) THE DECOMPOSITION OF SERPENTINE BY THERMAL TREATMENT RAZGRADNJA SERPENTINA PRITOPLOTNIOBDELAVI Damir Hršak,Jadranka Malina,Anita Begić Hadžipašić Faculty of Metallurgy, University of Zagreb, Aleja narodnih heroja 3, 44103, Sisak, Croatia damirhrsakŽyahoo.com Prejem rokopisa – received: 2005-03-21; sprejem za objavo - accepted for publication: 2005-11-03 Serpentine, Mg3Si2O5(OH)4, is a suitable raw material for the production of high-purity magnesium oxide and silica. The thermal decomposition of serpentine from the region of Ljeskovac, Croatia was investigated with the aim of establishing the optimum characteristics for acid leaching with pure and fine magnesium oxide and silica powder as the final products. For this purpose it was necessary to break up the crystal structure of the serpentine to obtain free magnesium oxide and silica. The first processing consisted of milling the serpentine to fine powder with a particle size of less than 200 µm and a thermal treatment at the temperature at which the crystal lattice breaks up. From the TG and DTA curves the optimum reaction parameters were established: a heating time of 180 min and a temperature of 660 °C. Key words: serpentine, thermal decomposition, magnesium oxide and/or silica preparation Serpentin Mg3Si2O5(OH)4 je primerna surovina za izdelavo čistega magnezijevega in silicijevega oksida. Toplotno razgradnjo serpentina iz Ljeskovca, Hrvatska, smo raziskali s ciljem, da dosežemo optimalne pogoje za luženje, katerega proizvodi sta fina prahova magnezijevega in silicijevega oksida. Da bi se to doseglo, je bilo treba razrešiti kristalno strukturo serpentina in sprostiti oba oksida. Serpentin smo zmleli na delca z velikostjo pod 200 µm in segreli do temperature degradacije kristalne mreže. Iz TG- in DTA-krivulj smo opredelili optimalne reakcijske parametre: čas segrevanja 180 min pri temperaturi 660 °C. Ključne besede: serpentin, termična razgradnja, priprava, magnezijev oksid, silicijev oksid 1 INTRODUCTION Serpentine minerals, Mg3Si2O5(OH)4, are widespread and often occur as modified products of olivine and other magnesium-rich silicates. They are found in metamorphic as well as in igneous rocks and occur locally in considerable quantities13. The serpentine group includes three closely related minerals: antigorite, lizardite and chrysotile. Basically, they have the same crystal structure and chemical composition, but they differ in the curvature of the lattice planes, which results in antigorite and lizardite being dense or fine-grained and crysotile being fibrous46. The basis of the crystal structure is a silicate layer connected to a layer of ŠMgO2(OH)4] octahedral. This composite layer is linked to the corresponding layers by weak bonds. Because of misfits between the points connecting the silicate layers and the ŠMgO2(OH)4] octahedral, the composite layers can become bent in waves or shaped into fibres711. In serpentine minerals, Fe and Ni can to some extent replace Mg, while, Al can to a lesser extent replace Si or Mg. As only free oxides allow the success of the acid leaching process with pure and high-quality magnesium dioxide or/and silica powder as the final products, in this study the thermal decomposition of Mg3Si2O5(OH)4 was determined. MATERIALI IN TEHNOLOGIJE 39 (2005) 6 2 EXPERIMENTAL Original mineral serpentine from the locality Ljeskovac, Croatia was used. The chemical composition of the serpentine powder was determined with a GBC Integra XM ICP analyser. The main constituents of serpentine are SiO2 (more than 45 %) and MgO (more than 30 %). The dominant admixture is Fe-oxides (more than 10 %). In addition, Al2O3, CaO, Cr2O3 and NiO are also present in amounts of more than 0.4 %. The milling process was carried out in a Fritsch Pulverisette 502 ball mill with a heatfield steel chamber, the particle size was assessed using a Fritsch Particle Sizer “analysette 22” and the phase analysis was performed by X-ray diffraction (XRD) with CuKa radiation. A Philips Diffracto-meter Model MPD 1880 type was used. The differential thermal analysis and thermogravimetric analysis were performed in a MOM Q 1500D derivatograph with a heating rate of 10 °C/min, an air atmosphere, a sample weight of 300 mg and a maximum temperature of 1000 °C. The time, temperature and thermal difference were computer recorded and plotted by means of table processor12. The inflection points on the curves were very clear and accurate. 3 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION The particle size distribution of the pulverized serpentine is shown in Figure 1. The results from the 225 D: HRŠAK ET AL.: THE DECOMPOSITION OF SERPENTINE BY THERMAL TREATMENT obtained powder size distribution is suitable for differential thermal analysis (DTA). In general, DTA curves for serpentines are somewhat reminiscent of curves for the kaolinite minerals, except that the endothermic and exothermic reactions follow almost immediately and are virtually without interspace. This is consistent with the general distinction between di- and trioctahedral minerals, the latter usually recrystallizing immediately after dehydroxylation to yield new products. Dehydroxylation appears to occur by an inhomogeneous mechanism14,15. Serpentine minerals are related both to kaolinite minerals and to chlorites; thus they are the trioctahedral analogues of the kaolinites, but can be readily converted into chlorites. Their chemical composition is much more variable than that of the kaolinite minerals14. In Figure 2 the results of the differential thermal analysis and the thermogravimetric analysis of the serpentine samples before and after thermal treatment are shown. The endothermic peak at 663 °C indicates the decomposition of the crystal lattice of serpentine in the case of the serpentine powder before thermal treatment (DTA 1), and it is absent for the serpentine powder after the thermal treatment (DTA 2). The breaking up of the crystal lattice is accompanied by a 10 % weight loss due to the loss of the chemically bonded water. In both cases the beginning of forsterite formation is indicated by the exothermic peak at nearly 800 °C. To confirm the conclusions obtained from the TG and DTA examinations, XRD analysis was also performed, and in Figure 3 the X-ray diffractograms of the serpentine powders before and after the thermal treatment are shown. Figure 2: Curves from DTA and TG analyses of serpentine powder before and after thermal treatment Slika 2: Krivulje analize prahu serpentina DTA in TG pred toplotno obdelavo in po njej Figure 1: Particle size distribution in serpentine powder Slika 1: Velikostna porazdelitev zrn v prahu serpentina serpentine analysis are plotted as an undersized fraction against the particle size. More than 99.90 % of the particles are less than 150 µm, 90 % of particles are less than 52.91 µm, more than 77.03 % are less than 32 µm, while a cumulative fraction of 50 % is achieved for a particles size of less than 14.58 µm. In this case the term cumulative fraction refers to a particles fraction below the given value. Only 0.53 % of particles are bigger than 125 µm, and the size of the largest particle is smaller than 200 µm, which means the particle size distribution is optimal for the leaching process13. And since more than 10 % of the particles are in the nanosize range we can conclude that the milling process was successfully performed and the 226 MATERIALI IN TEHNOLOGIJE 39 (2005) 6 D: HRŠAK ET AL.: THE DECOMPOSITION OF SERPENTINE BY THERMAL TREATMENT 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65 70 75 80 85 90 95 100 20/° Figure 3: XRD diffractograms of serpentine powder before and after thermal treatment Slika 3: XRD-difraktogrami prahu serpentina pred toplotno obdelavo in po njej The XRD pattern of the serpentine powder before the thermal treatment indicates that the serpentine is mainly in the form of antigorite. The absence of any significant characteristic peaks in the XRD pattern of the serpentine powder after the thermal treatment indicates that the thermal breaking up of the crystal lattice of the serpentine was successfully performed. 4 CONCLUSION The raw material used in this study was the mineral serpentine, Mg3Si2O5(OH)4, from the region of Ljesko-vac, Croatia. Using a thermal treatment, the original crystal lattice was broken up and an amorphous mixture of free oxides, magnesium oxide and silica was obtained, which is suitable for pulp leaching processing. The optimum parameters for the serpentine’s thermal treatment were established: a reaction time of 180 min and a temperature of 660 °C guarantee that the process of breaking up of the mineral lattice is performed with the lowest consumption of energy. 5 LITERATURE 1 D. W. Hyndman, Petrology of Igneous and Metamorphic Rocks, McGraw-Hill Book Company, 2nd ed., New York 1985, 550–562 2 P. Tapan, Indian Miner. 47 (1993), 151–156 3 W. A. Deer, R. A. Howie and J. Zussman, An Introduction to the Rock-Forming Minerals, Longman Scientific & Technical, 2nd ed., Hong Kong 1993, 554–555 4 R. L. Carlson, D. J. Miller, Geophys. Res. Lett. 24 (1997), 457–460 5 A. Hall, Igneous Petrology, Longman Scientific & Technical, 2nd ed., Malaysia 1998, 463 6 H. Blatt, R. J. Tracy, Petrology: Igneous, Sedimentary, and Meta-morphic, W. H. Freeman and Company, 2nd ed., New York 1996, 439 7 O. Johnsen, Photographic Guide to Minerals of the World, Oxford University Press, Oxford 2002, 334 8 A. M. Amer, Modell. Meas. Control. C. 48 (1995), 25–41 9 E. Dinelli, A. Lombini, A. Simoni, C. Ferrari, Mineral. Petrogr. Acta 40 (1997), 241–255 10 H. Feng, Huaxue Shijie, 37 (1996), 11–13 11 U. G. Gasse, R. A. Dahlgren, Soil Sci. 158 (1994), 409–420 12 G. Sučik, J. Durišin, T. Kuffa, Pripojenie Derivatografu Q1500D na PC AT/XT (Connection of Derivatograph Q1500D to PC AT/XT), Booklet of XIII. Conference on Thermal Analysis and Calorimetry – TERMANAL’94, Stara Lesná, 1994 13 K. Kosuge, K. Simada. A. Tsunashima, Chem. Mater. 7 (1995), 2241–2246 14 R. C. Mackenzie, Differential Thermal Analysis, Academic Press, 2nd ed., London 1970, 526–37 15 G. Sučik, D. Hršak, DTA a rafinácia serpentinitu, Booklet of XVI. Conference on Thermal Analysis and Calorimetry – TERMANAL 2003, Stará Lesná, 2003 MATERIALI IN TEHNOLOGIJE 39 (2005) 6 227