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ISSN print edition: 0366-6352
ISSN electronic edition: 1336-9075
Registr. No.: MK SR 9/7
Published monthly
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Single-State Process for Manufacturing of Potassium Sulphate from Sodium Sulphate
B. U. Grzmil and B. Kic
Institute of Chemical and Environment Engineering, Technical University of Szczecin, PL-70 322 Szczecin, Poland
E-mail: barbara.grzmil@ps.pl
Abstract: A single-stage process for the conversion of sodium sulphate (anhydrous or hydrated, of natural
or anthropogenic origin) with potassium chloride in aqueous solution at 20—25◦C to potassium
sulphate was developed. Both reagent grade sodium sulphate and that formed as a by-product
during trimethylolpropane synthesis were used as raw material. Initial reaction mixture contained
less than 30 mass % of salts with the calculated mole ratios n(KCl) : n(Na2SO4) ≥ 6; n(K2SO4 :
n(NaCl) ≥ 1. Resulting potassium sulphate contained about 96 mass % of K2SO4, 0.5 mass % of
Cl−, and 0.2 mass % of Na+.
At the first stage, a mixture of potassium chloride with glaserite was separated from the mother
liquor after the separation of K2SO4 through solvent evaporation followed by crystallization at
temperatures ≤ 2◦C. During the second stage, sodium chloride was separated from the solution
obtained after the solvent evaporation and crystallization at 110◦C. Both, the mixture of KCl
and K3Na(SO4)2 and the remaining end-liquor were recycled to the conversion stage. Raw sodium
chloride was a by-product formed in the process.
Full paper in Portable Document Format: 596ba476.pdf
Chemical Papers 59 (6b) 476–480 (2005)
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