Solar Production of Aluminum by Direct Reduction: Preliminary Results for Two Processes

Author:

Murray Jean P.1

Affiliation:

1. CNRS-IMP, Center du four solaire Fe´lix Trombe, BP5, 66125, Odeillo, France

Abstract

The production of aluminum or silicon by reduction of their oxides with carbon is a technical challenge. The temperature required, in the range 2100–2300°C, is too high for practical process heat addition from a combustion source alone. When an electrothermal process is used, only about a third of the energy contained in the fuel used to generate electricity enters the process. Thus, for materials produced electrolytically or in an electric furnace, the energy cost dominates the cost of the final product. By contrast, highly-concentrated solar energy is capable of supplying large amounts of process heat at very high temperatures, and may have real advantages for metals reduction processes. An arc introduces too much energy to the reaction zone. In the case of aluminum, the metal floats and it short circuits the arc. Ideally, the heat would enter at the bottom or side of a reactor, which could be achieved with solar process heat. Among industries, the primary aluminum industry is a major consumer of electricity. It uses about 10 percent of the electricity generated globally for industrial purposes, and about half comes from coal-fired generation stations. This represents about 5 percent of the electricity generated for all sectors. A solar-thermal process would drastically reduce the emission of climate-altering gases, reduce the reliance on electricity, and might be a critical factor in making a direct thermal route from the ore to metal possible. Two industrially-developed processes appear to be attractive candidates for a solar process. Preliminary tests have been performed using a black-body cavity receiver placed at the focus of the Paul Scherrer Institute’s 70 kW tracking parabolic concentrator, and though the experiment had to be ended earlier than planned, a small amount of 61/37 weight percent Al/Si alloy was formed, and the partially reacted pellets showed conversion to Al4C3 and SiC. Further qualitative tests have been performed using the facilities at Odeillo in a 2 kW solar furnace, where the onset of production of both aluminum by direct carbothermal reduction, and Al-Si alloy via carbothermal reduction of a mixture of alumina, silica and carbon could be directly observed.

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Energy Engineering and Power Technology,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment

Reference30 articles.

1. Bruno, M. J., 1983, “Production of Aluminum-Silicon Alloy and Ferrosilicon and Commercial Purity Aluminum by the Direct Reduction Process,” CONS-5089-16 UC-95f, Feb 1983, 466 pp. Appendix to the same: CONS-5089-16-App. 200 pp.

2. Cochran, C. N., 1987, “Alternate Smelting Processes for Aluminum,” Light Metals 1987, R. D. Zabreznik, ed., Warrendale, PA: TMS, pp. 429–443.

3. Bruno, M. J., 1984, “Overview of ALCOA Direct Reduction Process Technology,” Light Metals 1984, J. P. McGeer, ed., Warrendale, PA:TMS, pp. 1571–1590.

4. Troup, R. L., 1984, “Feasibility of an Aluminum-Silicon Blast Furnace,” Light Metals 1984, J. P. McGeer, ed., Warrendale, PA:TMS, pp. 1591–1612.

5. Stevenson, D. T., 1984, “Feasibility of an Aluminum-Silicon Blast-arc Process,” Light Metals 1984, J. P. McGeer, ed., Warrendale, PA:TMS, pp. 1613–1631.

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