Abstract
Various uses of corrosion resistant Lead, such as pipes, pewter and paint, has been identified in known history.
Many applications in modern days use lead e.g., to prepare lead glazes for pottery and, in insecticides, hair dyes
and as an anti-knocking additive for petrol. Lead is still widely used for pigments, ammunition, cable sheathing,
weights for lifting, and weight belts for diving, leads crystal glass and in some solders. There are applications
where lead is required in its refined form, such as background radiation reduction by providing lead shielding of
environmental samples in High Purity Germanium (HPGe) spectroscopy. Pure lead is also required as a starting
material for fabrication of plates of lead accumulator in battery industry. In present study, ultra-fine purification
of scrap lead has been investigated by electrolysis. Electrolysis was done using different electrolytes, different
electrodes and with varying interelctrode distances. One electrolyte used was lead dissolved in hexafluorosilic
acid and the other was lead dissolved in tartaric acid and nitric acid. Stainless steel and graphite were used as
cathode respectively while scrap lead is used as anode material. The results were compared by purification of
scrap lead by hydro-metallurgical process and vacuum distillation techniques and it was deduced that by the
electrolysis technique, the amount of pyrometallurgical process steps can be decreased dramatically.
Qanita Tayyaba, Khalid Waheed, Asif Mahmood, Syed Mujtaba ul Hassan, Naseem Irfan. (2017) Ultra-Fine Purification of Scrap Lead by Electrolysis , Pakistan Journal of Engineering and Applied Sciences, VOLUME 21, Issue 1.
-
Views
2121 -
Downloads
202
Article Details
Volume
Issue
Type
Language