Role of Additives: Modified Hemihydrate Phosphogypsum Morphology and Enhanced Filtration Performance of Wet-Process Phosphoric Acid

ACS OMEGA(2023)

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Abstract
The morphology of hemihydrate phosphogypsum crystals is of vital importance in the hemihydrate-dihydrate (HH-DH) wet-process phosphoric acid production for high filtration strength. The morphology of hemihydrate phosphogypsum is commonly needlelike due to the strong acidic crystallization environment, which is unfavorable to the following filtration process. In this study, the crystal habit of hemihydrate phosphogypsum with a large aspect ratio was skillfully modified by additives to achieve a higher filtration strength. d-Glucitol (DG) reduces the theoretical aspect ratio of hemihydrate phosphogypsum crystals from 2.076 to 1.583 by interacting with the (002) face of CaSO40.5H(2)O preferentially, and poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA) facilitates the aggregation of small grains to gather into a clusterlike structure. The modified morphologies of hemihydrate phosphogypsum have a lower bulk density and a larger porosity of the formed filter cake, which increases the filtration strength up to 45.9% when DG is added. Our work provides an in-depth explanation of the evolution mechanism of hemihydrate phosphogypsum morphology with the additives and its influence on the filtration performance. The improved filtration strength would reduce the water content of hemihydrate phosphogypsum and relieve the storage pressure of the phosphogypsum slag dump, which is meaningful to the clean production and process emission reduction of the phosphorus chemical industry.
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