Lunar Titanium Production

From Lunarpedia
Revision as of 15:48, 13 August 2011 by Silverwurm (talk | contribs) (→‎Hydrogen Reduction: removing redundancy betweeen linked articles)
Jump to: navigation, search

Introduction

The main source of Lunar Titanium is in the form of Ilmenite (FeTiO3). This material is found abundantly on the lunar surface, especially on the Maria. Being weakly magnetic, Ilmenite could be concentrated from the lunar regolith in a magnetic separator (a multistage device may be necessary due to other magnetic minerals present). There are several ways Titanium could be produced in a Lunar environment.


Terrestrial Production

On earth, Ilmenite is subjected to the Chloride Process[1], where it is reacted with carbon and chlorine to produce titanium and iron chlorides according to the formula:

2 FeTiO3 + 7 Cl2 + 6 C → 2 TiCl4 + 2 FeCl3 + 6 CO

The titanium tetrachloride is separated from the other reaction products by distillation. Once separated, is is reacted with liquid magnesium in the Kroll process[2], producing titanium metal and magnesium chloride:

TiCl4 + 2Mg → Ti + 2 MgCl2

The resulting sponge of titanium metal is then either crushed and washed or subjected to vacuum distillation to remove the magnesium chloride, and then melted and further refined to the desired purity.


It is possible to adapt this process to a lunar environment, though it presents some challenges. The chlorine and carbon required in the process would have to be stringently recycled, as they are rare (and hence likely to be quite expensive) in a lunar environment. The magnesium and iron chlorides could be electrolyzed to their respective metals, recovering the chlorine, and the carbon monoxide can be reacted with hydrogen to produce methane and water. The methane can then be split through pyrolysis back into hydrogen and carbon, and the water electrolyzed to recover the hydrogen as well as oxygen stripped from the Ilmenite.


Hydrogen Reduction

see also: Hydrogen Reduction

Ilmenite could be reacted with hydrogen, producing iron and titanium dioxide. The iron could then be separated by carbonyl extraction, distillation, or by grinding and removing the iron particles with a magnet. The titanium dioxide would then be refined by other means.

FFC Cambridge Process

Main Article: FFC Cambridge Process.

The FFC Cambridge Process is a method of performing electrolysis on solid metal oxides. The developers believe it has potential to replace the Kroll Process for terrestrial titanium production, due to its greater simplicity.

In this process, the oxide to be reduced is formed into a cathode and subjected to electrolysis in a molten calcium chloride bath. Oxygen is stripped off and bubbles off at the anode, leaving behind a metallic sponge.

The FFC Cambridge process could be used on the titanium dioxide produced from hydrogen reduction of Ilmenite, or the Ilmenite could be directly reduced, producing an Iron-Titanium alloy, which could then be subjected to either distillation or a carbonyl process to remove the iron.

Recovery of the chlorine is greatly simplified by the FFC Cambridge process compared to the Kroll Process, as the chlorine remains chemically bound to the calcium throughout the whole procedure. Furthermore, calcium chloride is not soluble in most metals, and is highly soluble in water, enabling separation by washing and/or melting.

References