Clean Ion-Exchange Technologies. 2. Recovery of High-Purity Magnesium Compounds from Seawater by an Ion-Exchange Isothermal Supersaturation Technique

This paper reports the results obtained by studying the ion-exchange isothermal supersaturation (IXISS) of magnesium carbonate solutions which is observed during elution of Mg2+ from carboxylic resin equilibrated with decalcinated seawater (artificial or natural) with either 2 M NH4HCO3 or with the mixture of 1.5 M Na2CO3 and 0.6 M NaHCO3. Crystallization of supersaturated solution in the first case has been shown to lead to the formation of previously unknown complex ammonium−magnesium carbonate. The results of X-ray, chemical, and differential thermal analyses have allowed the proposal of the following formula for the new magnesium compound:  (NH4)2Mg(CO3)2·5H2O. In the second case, crystallization of magnesium carbonate leads to the formation of a pure phase of nesquegonite:  MgCO3·3H2O of 99.9% purity. Samples of MgO obtained after annealing ammonium−magnesium precipitates at 773 K contain less than 10-3% of impurities.