
ZINC INFO
Zinc is a metallic element with symbol Zn, atomic
number 30, atomic weight 65.37.
It
is present within the 2nd group and more precisely in the subgroup B of the
periodic system, in its compounds always has an oxidation number of +2.
The
melting temperature is 419.5°C and the boiling temperature is reached AT 907°C.
Its mechanical properties allow extreme
resistance and excellent hardness (greater than tin and lead).
Used
in alloys since ancient times (especially with copper and tin), it has been
known and used in the pure state in fairly recent times, around the middle of
1700.
Its
use spread when the possibility to hot laminate it was discovered.
White
in colour tending to blue, zinc does not exist free in nature, the most
important minerals containing it are: calamine (or zinc silicate) blende (or
zinc sulphide) smithsonite (or zinc carbonate) hereinafter also
zincite (or zinc oxide), franklinite (or zinc spinel) but less important than
the first three listed.
The
deposits of these minerals are present, mostly in the United States, Latin
America, Australia, central and northern Europe and even in Italy largely in
the regions of Sardinia and Lombardy.
EXTRACTION OF ZINC
There
are two processes to extract zinc from minerals in which it is contained, the
thermal process and the electrolytic process.
The
thermal process is the most widely used today and the oldest.
The
minerals, through a process defined as "roasting", are transformed
into zinc oxide, the latter is subsequently transformed, by distillation in
metallic zinc due to the high temperature of operation.
This
process requires after a process defined as Refining, rarely, in fact, with the
thermal process the zinc reaches a purity of 98%, in this stage particles of
lead, iron, cadmium, arsenic, antimony and sulfur are still present .
To
purify the zinc the metal temperature is taken back to about 430°C for a period
of time, as a result of this additional fusion, the lead will settle to the
bottom of the tank while the other elements will place themselves on the
surface.
By
appropriate work of cleaning, zinc, now
pure to 99.9%, is cast into bars that are laminated while the metal is still
hot.
The
electrolytic process consists in submitting to the detergent and whitening
action (leach) with diluted sulfuric acid, the product which is obtained through
Roasting at a low temperature of the concentrates of sphalerite.
This
operation is carried out within a series of tanks (Pachuca vats) inside of
which air is blown in order to maintain the material under stirring.
The
solutions are purified from other metals aluminum, iron, silica which
precipitate as hydroxides by adjusting the pH to 5-5.5, copper, cadmium and
nickel precipitate with zinc dust cementation, while cobalt is removed by
precipitation with alpha-naphthol-beta-naphthol; arsenic
and antimony are often included or can be absorbed in the same precipitates.
From
the purified solution following filtration is performed the electrolysis
process with a concentration of 75-80 g / l of zinc.
For
the anode is used lead, while for the cathode is employed the aluminum; to the
terminals there is a voltage of 3.5-4V.
Zinc,
if the solutions were suitably purified, is deposited on the bottom, up to
99.9% pure.