Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10316/112073
Title: Physicochemical Properties of Fe-Bearing Phases from Commercial Colombian Coal Ash
Authors: Santos, Ana Cláudia
Cruz, Cláudia
Font, Eric 
French, David
Guedes, Alexandra 
Moreira, Karen
Sant'Ovaia, Helena 
Vieira, Bruno J. C.
Waerenborgh, João C.
Valentim, Bruno
Keywords: fly ash; bottom ash; ferrospheres; magnetic concentrates; optical microscopy; magnetic susceptibility; isothermal remanent magnetization; X-ray diffraction; Mössbauer spectroscopy; Raman microspectroscopy; scanning electron microscopy with energy dispersive spectroscopy
Issue Date: 2023
Publisher: MDPI
Project: The authors thanks to Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia (FCT) and Ministério da Ciência, Tecnologia, e Ensino Superior (MCTES) for this work support through the projects UIDB/04683/2020, UIDP/04683/2020, CHARPHITE of the 3rd ERA-MIN Program 2015 (FCT ref. ERA-MIN/0005/2015), INSUB (FCT ref. DRI-India/0315/2020) and PhD scholarship (SFRH/BD/ 131713/2017 and COVID/BD/151941/2021) provided to the author A.C.S. J.C.W. and B.J.C.V. acknowledges FCT support through the UID/Multi/04349/2019. C. C. acknowledge FCT support through the research contract under the UIDP/04683/2020 project. 
Serial title, monograph or event: Minerals
Volume: 13
Issue: 8
Abstract: High amounts of coal combustion products, such as fly ash and bottom ash, are generated every year; however, only 64% are used, which means that a significant part is landfilled despite containing valuable materials such as ferrospheres, which may be used as catalysts, substituting critical raw materials (e.g., platinoids). In commercial coals, pyrite contents are reduced as a pre-combustion S-emissions control measure, so low amounts of ferrospheres are expected in the respective ashes. However, given the large amounts of ash being generated from these coals, it may provide a reliable source of catalysts, with ferrospheres being easily recovered via magnetic separation. Several studies have been conducted regarding these morphotypes; however, there is a lack of investigation considering the ash derived from highly beneficiated coals and the variations with location and time. In this study, bottom ash, economizer grits, and fly ash samples from a Portuguese power plant burning Colombian commercial coal were fractionated using ferrite (Fe-MC fraction) and Nd (Nd-MC fraction) magnets, and a multi-technique approach was used to assess their properties (magnetic parameters, particle size distribution, mineralogy, particle morphology, microtexture, and chemical composition). The Fe-MC presented higher Fe concentrations (up to 44 wt.% Fe2O4) than the Nd-MC (up to 7 wt.% Fe2O4). Once it was a sequential process, Nd magnets essentially collected Fe-bearing aluminosilicate glass, and Fe-bearing minerals were residual when compared to the Fe-MC, where magnetite, magnesioferrite, hematite, and maghemite accounted for up to 30 wt.%. Among the Fe-MC, the sample collected from electrostatic precipitator fly ash (ESP FA), despite having a lower yield, presented higher Fe concentrations than the ones from bottom ash and economizer grits, which was related to the mode of occurrence of Fe-bearing phases: in the Fe-MC from ESP FA, discrete ferrospheres predominated, while in the remaining Fe-bearing phases, they were often embedded in aluminosilicate glass. All Fe-MC samples showed an increase of Fe-substituting elements (e.g., Mn and Ni) and their concentration tended to increase with decreasing particle size along with Fe. The integrated study of cross-sections enabled the identification of oxidation rims, martitization aspects, and the co-existence of hematite and magnesioferrite.
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10316/112073
ISSN: 2075-163X
DOI: 10.3390/min13081055
Rights: openAccess
Appears in Collections:FCTUC Ciências da Terra - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais

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