Argonne research could lead to cooler aluminum production
ARGONNE, Ill. (June 10, 2005) – Researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy's
Argonne National Laboratory and NorandaFalconbridge,
Inc. are developing a
way to produce aluminum at significantly reduced temperatures. The collaborative
research effort could eventually lead to significant reductions in the energy
costs and emissions of greenhouse gases associated with aluminum production.
The four-year, $2.25-million joint project is one phase of a long-term effort
to improve on the massive electrolytic cells in which aluminum is produced
on an industrial scale. In these cells, alumina, dissolved in a molten electrolyte,
is stripped of its oxygen atoms by a strong electrical current and converted
into the metallic aluminum that makes up consumer products like soda cans and
aircraft wings.
John Hryn, the Argonne metallurgist leading the project, said the process
usually requires temperatures of 960 degrees C. At that temperature, few materials
can withstand the oxygen produced electrolytically inside the cell. Sacrificial
carbon anodes have been used in aluminum production since the process was invented
in 1886. As aluminum is formed, the carbon anode is consumed by oxygen, and
the resulting carbon dioxide bubbles out of the cell.
For many years, researchers have sought a new, non-consumable anode to replace
carbon anodes. Hryn thinks the answer may lie in modifying the cell electrolyte
to operate at lower temperatures. Several years ago, he and his colleagues
discovered an electrolyte composition that can dissolve alumina and produce
aluminum metal at 700 degrees C, more than 250 degrees cooler than current
electrolytes.
“The lower operating temperature opens up the possibility for
new anode materials,” he said.
Using standard aluminum-bronze anodes in bench-scale tests at Argonne, Hryn
and colleagues demonstrated that the new electrolysis cells operated for 100
hours without any significant corrosion at the anode. Also, the cell produces
oxygen as a byproduct instead of carbon dioxide and perfluorocarbon, two kinds
of greenhouse gas produced in carbon anode electrolytic cells.
However, Hryn cautions that the largest hurdles still remain. The system must
be tested at successively larger scales, each involving higher electrical currents
and running for longer periods of time.
“At larger scales, we start to see
the materials issues emerge,” Hryn said. “Things that seem to work well on
the bench tend to fail at larger scales, primarily because you are working
at these extreme conditions. Our advantage is that we are operating 250 degrees
lower than everybody else, and that's a big difference for materials.”
The cooperative research and development agreement between Argonne and Noranda
formalizes a joint effort that has existed for the past four years. Hryn said
it is important for Argonne to have an industrial partner at this stage of
the project.
“We get their input on what is important to them right at this
stage," he said, "so as we get larger, we're addressing exactly their concerns.
Working with industry early on is really the key to success.”
If the new electrolytic cells are successful and replace the old cells and
their consumable carbon anodes, the benefits to the aluminum industry and the
environment will be tremendous. The Department of Energy, in conjunction with
members of the aluminum industry, released an “Inert Anode Roadmap” six years
ago that projected energy efficiency increases of 25 percent, operating cost
reductions of 10 percent, and greenhouse gas emissions reductions of 7 million
metric tons of carbon equivalent in the United States. Also, aluminum producers
using nonconsumable anode technology will not have to purchase carbon anodes
or maintain facilities that produce them.
“There's a huge incentive to get
rid of all that,” Hryn said. NorandaFalconbridge, Inc. is a leading mining and metals company. It employs
16,000 people at its operations and offices in 18 countries and is listed on
the New York Stock Exchange (NRD) and the Toronto Stock Exchange (NRD.LV).
Argonne National Laboratory seeks solutions to pressing national problems in science and technology.
The nation's first national laboratory, Argonne conducts leading-edge basic
and applied scientific research in virtually every scientific discipline. Argonne
researchers work closely with researchers from hundreds of companies, universities,
and federal, state and municipal agencies to help them solve their specific
problems, advance America 's scientific leadership and prepare the nation for
a better future. With employees from more than 60 nations, Argonne is managed
by UChicago
Argonne, LLC for
the U.S.
Department of Energy's Office
of Science.
For more information, please
contact Steve McGregor (630/252-5580 or media@anl.gov)
at Argonne.
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