Alkali manufacture

Alkali manufacture is the process by which an alkali is made. Typical alkalis, produced commercially, include sodium hydroxide, sodium carbonate, potassium hydroxide and potassium carbonate.

This is a historical article, primarily based on the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition. For current information see sodium hydroxide manufacture and Chloralkali process.

A number of processes have been proposed for the manufacture of alkali from various metals, the most common being the Leblanc and ammonia-soda processes.[1]

The Lime process

Historically, sodium hydroxide was produced by treating sodium carbonate (usually from wood ash) with calcium hydroxide (aka Lime) in a metathesis reaction. (Sodium hydroxide is soluble while calcium carbonate is not.) This process was called causticizing.[2]

The Leblanc Process

The Leblanc process, which was invented by Nicolas Leblanc around 1790, begins with the decomposition of sodium chloride by sulfuric acid, by which sodium sulfate and hydrochloric acid are produced. The sodium sulfate is afterwards fired with calcium carbonate and coal. Sodium carbonate can be extracted from this mixture by washing the mixture with water.[1]

Until the rise of the ammonia-soda process, which has better economics, the Leblanc process was used extensively making the United Kingdom the lead in alkali production. By the early 20th century, the UK's production outstripped that of all other producers combined.[1]

Most of the British alkali works are situated in South Lancashire and the adjoining part of Cheshire, near the mouth of the Tyne and in the West of Scotland.[1]

The Ammonia-Soda Process

Despite improvements made to the Leblanc Process, economics determines that it cannot compete effectively against the ammonia-soda process which is now more common.

There are a number of reasons for this:

  • The sodium used in the process is practically free.
  • The fuel requirement is halved.
  • Efficiency improvements have reduced 'waste' in the process to a minimum.

The only way in which the Leblanc process could still hold its own was by being turned in the direction of making caustic soda, to which it lends itself more easily than the ammonia-soda process; but the latter has invaded even this field. One advantage, however, still remained to the Leblanc process. All endeavours to obtain either hydrochloric acid or free chlorine in the ammonia-soda process have proved commercial failures; all the chlorine of the sodium chloride being ultimately lost in the shape of worthless calcium chloride. The Leblanc process thus remained the sole purveyor of chlorine in its active forms, and in this way the fact is accounted for that, at least in Great Britain, the Leblanc process still furnishes nearly half of all the alkali made, though in other countries its proportional share is much less. The profit made upon the chlorine produced has to make up for the loss on the alkali.[1]

The ammonia-soda process was first patented on 30 June 1838 by Harrison Gray Dyar and John Hemming,[3][4] who carried it out on an experimental scale in Whitechapel. Many attempts were soon after made in the same direction, both in England and on the continent of Europe, the most remarkable of which was the ingenious combination of apparatus devised by J. J. T. Schloesing and E. Rolland. But a really economical solution of the problem was first definitely found in 1872 by Ernest Solvay, as the result of investigations begun about ten years previously. The greater portion of all the soda-ash of commerce is now made by Solvay's apparatus, which alone shall be described in this place, although it should be borne in mind that the principles laid down by Dyar and Hemming have been and are still successfully carried out in a number of factories by an entirely different kind of apparatus.[1]

Other processes

References

  1.  One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Alkali Manufacture". Encyclopædia Britannica. 1 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 674–685.
  2. Deming, Horace G. (1925). General Chemistry: An Elementary Survey Emphasizing Industrial Applications of Fundamental Principles (2nd ed.). New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. p. 452.
  3. "Soda ash, Solvay style". American Chemical Society. Retrieved 21 April 2017.
  4. Newton, William (1839). The London Journal of Arts and Sciences, and Repertory of Patent Inventions. 14. p. 400.
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