Recovery of high surface area alumina from aluminium dross tailings

Aluminium dross tailings (ADT), a chemical waste from a factory producing aluminium in Egypt, was used for the recovery of the aluminium content in the form of alumina (Al 2 O 3 ). Extraction of the aluminium was carried out via atmospheric- and high-pressure leaching with caustic soda. Then, it was separated from the sodium aluminate solutions thus obtained, using six different precipitation methods (via H 2 O 2 , via carbonation, via ammonium carbonate, via ammonium bicarbonate, via ammonium aluminium sulfate, via addition of active seeds). The precipitates were filtered, washed, dried and calcined at 600°C to produce the test aluminas. The precipitates and the calcination products were analysed for their chemical and crystalline phase compositions. The calcination products (aluminas) were subjected to sorpometry for surface area determination, and to particle sizing. The results indicated that highly pure (SiO 2 200 m 2 /g) and uniform small crystallite sizes (60-70A) could be efficiently recovered from ADT. Optimal recovery conditions were examined and determined.