Difference between revisions of "Talk:Lunar Titanium Production"
(Separation of iron and titanium metal) |
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==Separation of iron and titanium metal== | ==Separation of iron and titanium metal== | ||
In the section <nowiki> ==FFC Cambridge Process== </nowiki> it states that "This <Iron-Titanium alloy> could then be melted and distilled under partial vacuum to produce iron and titanium." I suggest powderizing the molten alloy and treating it with carbon monoxide to form [[Carbonyl Metals Plant|iron carbonyl]]. This should separate iron and titanium with better energy efficiency and more thoroughness than I would expect from a distillation process. I think the process works at a powderized iron-titanium alloy temperature. I am unsure at the moment of the relevant melting and carbonyl formation temperatures. I understand that carbonyl iron would be a rather pure product. [[User:Farred|Farred]] 21:03, 9 August 2011 (UTC) | In the section <nowiki> ==FFC Cambridge Process== </nowiki> it states that "This <Iron-Titanium alloy> could then be melted and distilled under partial vacuum to produce iron and titanium." I suggest powderizing the molten alloy and treating it with carbon monoxide to form [[Carbonyl Metals Plant|iron carbonyl]]. This should separate iron and titanium with better energy efficiency and more thoroughness than I would expect from a distillation process. I think the process works at a powderized iron-titanium alloy temperature. I am unsure at the moment of the relevant melting and carbonyl formation temperatures. I understand that carbonyl iron would be a rather pure product. [[User:Farred|Farred]] 21:03, 9 August 2011 (UTC) | ||
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+ | Thanks for the input. I've added details of the process on the main FFC Cambridge page, and an abbreviated version here. --[[User:Silverwurm|Silverwurm]] 07:02, 10 August 2011 (UTC) |
Latest revision as of 23:02, 9 August 2011
Separation of iron and titanium metal
In the section ==FFC Cambridge Process== it states that "This <Iron-Titanium alloy> could then be melted and distilled under partial vacuum to produce iron and titanium." I suggest powderizing the molten alloy and treating it with carbon monoxide to form iron carbonyl. This should separate iron and titanium with better energy efficiency and more thoroughness than I would expect from a distillation process. I think the process works at a powderized iron-titanium alloy temperature. I am unsure at the moment of the relevant melting and carbonyl formation temperatures. I understand that carbonyl iron would be a rather pure product. Farred 21:03, 9 August 2011 (UTC)
Thanks for the input. I've added details of the process on the main FFC Cambridge page, and an abbreviated version here. --Silverwurm 07:02, 10 August 2011 (UTC)