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Fantasma4500
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[*] posted on 22-2-2020 at 02:04
Lead distillation


anyone have directions of what company around europe might be able to help with building an apparatus for distilling maybe as much as 100 tonnes of lead? would be around 10m3
it would have to withstand around 1750*C, im thinking short distillation path, but due to 1750*C steel is out of the question
i think fixing something like that up all by myself is out of the question

im thinking the people who produce equipment for melting steel might be able to offer something around this type of equipment, but i dont know any brand names of such around europe
as for heating elements, 1750*C seems to be the outer limits, so barely even possible, i imagine it would be very difficult as the lead would be all over the vessel which could easily shortcut the heating elements, is distillation of lead ever actually done?




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[*] posted on 22-2-2020 at 02:30


Not to rain on your parade, but have you thought this through? 100 tons? Is that per year, or in total? And what's your budget? A few thousand € wont buy you more than a meeting or two.



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[*] posted on 22-2-2020 at 03:40


Wow why do you want to distil about 10 cubic meters of lead? Does it have something valuable in it you want to extract?

You could heat the lead by induction using a coil outside of the furnace. Molten metals at that temperature tends to be very corrosive. I guess the crucible would have to be made of mostly of MgO or Al2O3.

Perhaps you could use a high temperature a kiln and fit with a ceramic flask the neck of which would have to protrudes from the kiln.

I melted lead in a small crucible using using the current from a high current transformers I guess that could be used or arc melting.

At ten litres in each distillation its 1,000 runs. Perhaps something bigger like the following

zinc-dis.jpg - 291kB




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[*] posted on 22-2-2020 at 04:37


You have two fundamental problems. One is scale. The other is temperature. Before going too far into this quest, consider your objective. There have to be simpler processes.


For something of this scale and temp, you land right in the territory of refractory bricks such as those used in steelmaking furnaces. These are skillfully shaped and mechanically interlock without mortar. Good luck.
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Tsjerk
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[*] posted on 22-2-2020 at 05:18


Better oxidize the lead into solution and reduce it back into metal on a electrode. Cheaper and easier.
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[*] posted on 22-2-2020 at 07:04


I think Tsjerk is right. My younger brother managed to boil lead when he used to make little soldier figurines. Lead vapors are not to be trifled with!
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[*] posted on 22-2-2020 at 08:45


I see no reason why an apparatus couldn't be built by the amatuer for a few thousand dollars... I can't see the appeal but here's my thoughts...
Refractory brick and refractory cement can withstand that temperature without issue. Building a simple airtight retort from it shouldn't be hard or even expensive, in the grand scheme of things. I've built plenty of forges/foundries, it takes some skill to build with refractory compounds but not much. The bricks do radiate heat so I'd wrap it with a copious amounts of kaowool. Forced air propane can get up to just under 2k c. No issue there, though manufacturing the burners would be a pain if you don't have a metal shop. I've done it but. Still hard.
Unless the lead is grossly contaminated, requiring emptying of the boiling chamber, I'd figure out some way of adding more lead to it while it's going so as to save time with heating and cooling. Thick, capped steel tube though which you can pour more lead as it progresses.
And I'm assuming lead is the lowest boiling compound. If there are others with a similar boiling point you'd have to be really careful that none of it came over. Cleaning of the apparatus would have to be done with a propane torch. Get used to wearing a facemask. Any water in the apparatus could prove fatal.
But, again, I have to ask. Why. Seems like a lot of work and if you're putting that much money in to separate something (silver? Antimony?) From the lead I'd reckon an electrochemical route would be the way to go. Is this just a thought experiment or do you have 100 tonnes of lead stashed in the basement that the misses is nagging you about dealing with?




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[*] posted on 22-2-2020 at 16:20


Even with an electrochemical method, say electroplating the lead from an electrode to another and assuming 100% efficiency you would still need A LOT of current for a long time to process 100 tonnes. 100 tonnes of lead: that's 483 kmoles. Per Faraday's law of electrolysis, you would need 2*483'000 [mol]*96485 [C/mol] = 93.2 gigacoulombs of charge transfered to electroplate all the lead. That's 93.2 billion amp*second. Assuming you can find a power supply that can deliver (say) 1000 Amps DC, you would need just shy of 3 years of continuous operation to accomplish your goal. Not completely out of reach, but pretty difficult.

Anyway I'm dying to find out why you want to distill 100 tonnes of lead, please provide some details!
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Fantasma4500
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[*] posted on 23-2-2020 at 05:33


the idea is seperation of elements, ontop of that the lead has near zero radiation which - despite having been unable to find anything on it, ive been told is valuable in itself, i just feel like chemical seperation would be a mess. ontop of that electrolysis is as pointed out something that takes quite some time

ive thought about just basic refractory bricks, but when youre dealing with one lead bar thats 100kg- just putting one of those down on those little fragile bars, youre gonna break the whole setup with first bar just carefully lowering them down

about the temperature required- 1750*C, tungsten appears to be used for 2500*C heating, but tungsten oxidizes very easily without an inert atmosphere, with an open vessel i think reaching a high temperature could be an issue, maybe bottom could be made of a metal with a high melting point and then it could be heated from underneath?
the lead could be added as a liquid, this would take care of the impact issue

the reason i want to distill 100 tonnes of lead is purely monetary, without trying to be mysterious i cant go into detail, but fractional distillation seems to be the ideal way, the metals have quite some difference in boiling point.

making the vessel would need to be quite well sealed up, my own personal dealing with lead have found it that even tiny little cracks would leak lead

i dont fear the lead fumes much, should settle out quite easily, the retort might clog up however, but this shouldnt be much of an issue with something as soft and low melting as lead

if combustion was to be used i think lead fumes would be a more important issue as the heat would carry further, im just thinking of direct heating here.

ive thought about writing a university as they would typically know big companies for these odd exotic chemical operations, money shouldnt be an issue if we could just pull a bit of this material through.






~25 drops = 1mL @dH2O viscocity - STP
Truth is ever growing - but without context theres barely any such.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solubility_table
http://www.trimen.pl/witek/calculators/stezenia.html
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[*] posted on 23-2-2020 at 10:30


I would also strongly encourage doing this through an electrorefining method such as electrowinning. Perhaps something like the following:
https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&...
Designing large scale, High temperature reaction vessels for neurotoxic elements is honestly not something to be casually done. I have two degrees in this field and am a nationally certified engineer and even I would not touch this project unless it was absolutely necessary and the client had the budget to do it right. While your own health may be a risk you are willing to take (which I completely understand because I am the same way), it is the risk to the people around you that is the larger problem. By distilling in a DIY lead still you would almost certainly be violating federal air quality control acts as well as opening yourself up to a very hefty lawsuit by your neighbors (think Flint MI water) which could present you with potentially millions of dollars of exposure per person depending on the severity of exposure. I would highly recommend, if you must do this, to use an electrochemical method. If you run the cell at night you will save on power and you will be able to recover any precious metals in your lead as well!




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unionised
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[*] posted on 23-2-2020 at 10:57


Quote: Originally posted by Antiswat  
the lead has near zero radiation which



No it hasn't
There are natural radioisotopes of lead.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isotopes_of_lead

Zone refining seems like a much easier job (and would produce a higher purity product than simple distillation.)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zone_melting
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[*] posted on 23-2-2020 at 12:44


Ooh. Zone refining. Now there's something I have not heard of i. A while.
Excellent suggestion.
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[*] posted on 24-2-2020 at 05:57


Quote: Originally posted by Antiswat  
the idea is seperation of elements, ontop of that the lead has near zero radiation


Only if the lead is very old, so that unstable isotopes of lead have had time to decay.
Lead from ancient times (eg cargo from an old sunken roman boat) is valued by physicist as shielding for certain experiments. Its a very specific market though. Not sure you can make a lot of money with this.

Quote:

ive thought about writing a university as they would typically know big companies for these odd exotic chemical operations.


I doubt it, most universities are research institutions. Very few of them will have experience with industrial scale metal purifications. I'd rather call a smelter or a mining company.

Purifying lead isn't very exotic. Just the method that you've chosen.
Is the metal that the lead is alloyed with very exotic?


[Edited on 24-2-2020 by phlogiston]




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Tsjerk
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[*] posted on 24-2-2020 at 06:30


I really hope these metals are used for the best; scientific equipment asking for radiation free steel.

Metals refined before atmospheric nuclear tests are precious, but I'm afraid the ships salvaged are just going for the normal metal prices...
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[*] posted on 24-2-2020 at 07:42


It's perfectly possible to make low-background steel today.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_reduced_iron

In general you don't want air getting to your steel while you smelt it. The oxygen in air is exactly what you are trying to remove.

Use of hydrogen allows removal of practically any radioactive material from the reductant.
Iron ore isn't likely to contain significant amounts of uranium etc. (I'd guess a few ppm)
I suspect a pre-treatment with carbonate could strip most of any uranium that is present.
You could ensure that the reduction process was performed under conditions where uranium wasn't converted to metal.
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[*] posted on 24-2-2020 at 07:53


Alright. I hate to be "that guy" who goes on an amateur chemistry thread and says that the method at hand is impractical and expensive, a good many threads have been derailed by assess who can't think of anything better to say than "this isn't economical".
However.
If distilling lead by the 100 tonne quantity, in order to produce low background radiation lead metal is your goal, this isn't economical.
So much seems to be a secret... If you can't tell us what other metals are in the lead, for fear of us copying the idea, it might be more practical to call up an industrial smelter or professional metallurgist and pitch to them. I think the reason we're bouncing around from one idea to the next is a lack of knowledge about your situation.




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Tsjerk
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[*] posted on 24-2-2020 at 08:12


Quote: Originally posted by unionised  
It's perfectly possible to make low-background steel today.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_reduced_iron

In general you don't want air getting to your steel while you smelt it. The oxygen in air is exactly what you are trying to remove.

Use of hydrogen allows removal of practically any radioactive material from the reductant.
Iron ore isn't likely to contain significant amounts of uranium etc. (I'd guess a few ppm)
I suspect a pre-treatment with carbonate could strip most of any uranium that is present.
You could ensure that the reduction process was performed under conditions where uranium wasn't converted to metal.


Yes, you absolutely right, but melting the iron already refined is a lot easier than refining new iron.
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[*] posted on 24-2-2020 at 08:56


Old lead can indeed be valuable. Not only for shielding, IIRC it's also desirable for microchip mfg. But it doesn't have to be from ancient times, a few hundred years should be enough.



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[*] posted on 25-2-2020 at 01:17


Wouldn't vacuum distillation be easier? It would lower the temperature requirements considerably.
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[*] posted on 25-2-2020 at 04:18


Smelters yes. But I'm certain you can find a company that recycles lead from car batteries.
I'd go to them first with my questions.

They should be easy to find: follow the paper trail.
These companies always attract controversy and should be in the papers...




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Fantasma4500
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[*] posted on 27-2-2020 at 06:04


Steam: thanks for the heads up, this is one of the reasons i wouldnt fancy handling 100 tonnes of lead in my kitchen, let alone to just handle a single of those bars it would be ideal to put up lifting equipment and worse

unionised:
i cant remember if lab confirmed that the lead was very low in radiation or if we simply assume so because it is infact ancient lead.

zone refining sounds doable and very easy- except the lower melting portion is in very small quantities, i dont think it would coalesce, unless you were to grind the whole deal into granules or maybe dust, i would assume you would need to grind that up in very cold temperatures for the lead to not be all sorts of sticky and actually turn into dust - supposing it would be possible or even make a difference in zone refining if it was as powder
would 2 molten metals seperate themselves by gravity if kept molten maybe?

vosoryx:
the low radiation lead is a bonus, i suspected the market for such to be very low but who knows

DavidJR:
vacuum distillation is an idea, would require a very large vacuum device i suppose, do you know by chance if its possible to lower boiling point equally to that of water? i recall NurdRage managed to reduce boiling point of water to just around 20*C with a cheaply homemade setup

alright so i guess i could try hearing some smelters out who their equipment supplier is and then talk to them and hear if they have ever heard of equipment capable of doing such or maybe know engineers that could help with this project
if car battery recyclers dont give one shit already then i might shoot them a letter haha, by chance ive seen nearby scrapyard having tonnes of car batteries lying around, theyre dealing not just with lead melting but also some amounts of lead salts, but then again they probably operate just around melting point of lead





~25 drops = 1mL @dH2O viscocity - STP
Truth is ever growing - but without context theres barely any such.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solubility_table
http://www.trimen.pl/witek/calculators/stezenia.html
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[*] posted on 27-2-2020 at 07:04


Quote: Originally posted by Antiswat  


DavidJR:
vacuum distillation is an idea, would require a very large vacuum device i suppose, do you know by chance if its possible to lower boiling point equally to that of water? i recall NurdRage managed to reduce boiling point of water to just around 20*C with a cheaply homemade setup


A simple water jet pump will pull a vacuum which will make water boil as low as the temperature of the water used in the pump.

For vacuum distillation of metals: see this.
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Fantasma4500
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[*] posted on 7-3-2020 at 03:16


so it takes about 300*C off, of what i understand, but more interestingly- lead distillation has been done. now i just need to figure out who has done it
0:50 they show normal BP vs vacuum BP of metals, magnesium having lower boiling point under vacuum than its melting point? so melting point should also be shifted with vacuum. in the video it says lead can distill at 957*C - this means the whole setup could be made with steel, corrosion is lesser issue.
even aluminium is doable in steel construction, the link you shared mentions producing metal powders by controlling condensation
this is getting off topic but this has quite some potential. except it seems steel melts at lower temperature under vacuum.




~25 drops = 1mL @dH2O viscocity - STP
Truth is ever growing - but without context theres barely any such.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solubility_table
http://www.trimen.pl/witek/calculators/stezenia.html
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[*] posted on 7-3-2020 at 04:15


The effect of pressure on melting points is tiny. You can pretty much ignore it.
You also need to remember that molten lead is a good solvent for some metals; I think lead in steel is more or less OK.
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