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Chlorine production

Chlorine gas can be produced by extracting from natural materials, including the electrolysis of a sodium chloride solution (brine) and other ways.

Gas extraction edit

Chlorine can be manufactured by the electrolysis of a sodium chloride solution (brine), which is known as the Chloralkali process. The production of chlorine results in the co-products caustic soda (sodium hydroxide, NaOH) and hydrogen gas (H2). These two products, as well as chlorine itself, are highly reactive. Chlorine can also be produced by the electrolysis of a solution of potassium chloride, in which case the co-products are hydrogen and caustic potash (potassium hydroxide). There are three industrial methods for the extraction of chlorine by electrolysis of chloride solutions, all proceeding according to the following equations:

Cathode: 2 H+ (aq) + 2 e → H2 (g)
Anode: 2 Cl (aq) → Cl2 (g) + 2 e

Overall process: 2 NaCl (or KCl) + 2 H2O → Cl2 + H2 + 2 NaOH (or KOH)

Mercury cell electrolysis edit

 
Castner–Kellner cell: Sodium chloride is electrolyzed between the "A" anode and "M" mercury cathode in the side cells, with chlorine bubbling up into the space above the NaCl and the sodium dissolving in the mercury. The sodium–mercury amalgam flows to the center cell, where it reacts with water to produce sodium hydroxide and regenerate the mercury.

Mercury cell electrolysis, also known as the Castner–Kellner process, was the first method used at the end of the nineteenth century to produce chlorine on an industrial scale.[1][2] The "rocking" cells used have been improved over the years.[3] Today, in the "primary cell", titanium anodes clad with platinum[4] or conductive metal oxides (formerly graphite anodes) are placed in a sodium (or potassium) chloride solution flowing over a liquid mercury cathode. When a potential difference is applied and current flows, chlorine is released at the titanium anode and sodium (or potassium) dissolves in the mercury cathode forming an amalgam. This flows continuously into a separate reactor ("denuder" or "secondary cell"), where it is usually converted back to mercury by reaction with water, producing hydrogen and sodium (or potassium) hydroxide at a commercially useful concentration (50% by weight). The mercury is then recycled to the primary cell by a pump situated at the bottom.

The mercury process is the least energy-efficient of the three main technologies (mercury, diaphragm and membrane) and there are also concerns about mercury emissions.

It is estimated that there are still around 100 mercury-cell plants operating worldwide. In Japan, mercury-based chloralkali production was virtually phased out by 1987 (except for the last two potassium chloride units shut down in 2003). In the United States, there will be only five mercury plants remaining in operation by the end of 2008. In Europe, mercury cells accounted for 43% of capacity in 2006 and Western European producers have committed to closing or converting all remaining chloralkali mercury plants by 2020.[5]

Diaphragm cell electrolysis (bipolar) edit

In diaphragm cell electrolysis, an asbestos (or polymer-fiber) diaphragm separates a cathode and an anode, preventing the chlorine forming at the anode from re-mixing with the sodium hydroxide and the hydrogen formed at the cathode.[6] This technology was also developed at the end of the nineteenth century. There are several variants of this process: the Le Sueur cell (1893), the Hargreaves-Bird cell (1901), the Gibbs cell (1908), and the Townsend cell (1904).[7][8] The cells vary in construction and placement of the diaphragm, with some having the diaphragm in direct contact with the cathode.

The salt solution is continuously fed to the anode compartment and flows through the diaphragm to the cathode compartment, where the caustic alkali is produced and the brine is partially depleted. As a result, diaphragm methods produce alkali that is quite dilute (about 12%) and of lower purity than do mercury cell methods.

Diaphragm cells are not burdened with the problem of preventing mercury discharge into the environment; they also operate at a lower voltage, resulting in an energy savings over the mercury cell method,[8] but large amounts of steam are required if the caustic has to be evaporated to the commercial concentration of 50%.

Membrane cell electrolysis edit

Development of this technology began in the 1970s. The electrolysis cell is divided into two "sections" by a cation permeable membrane acting as a cation exchanger. Saturated sodium (or potassium) chloride solution is passed through the anode compartment, leaving at a lower concentration.[9] Sodium (or potassium) hydroxide solution is circulated through the cathode compartment, exiting at a higher concentration. A portion of the concentrated sodium hydroxide solution leaving the cell is diverted as product, while the remainder is diluted with deionized water and passed through the electrolysis apparatus again.

This method is more efficient than the diaphragm cell and produces very pure sodium (or potassium) hydroxide at about 32% concentration, but requires very pure brine.

 
Membrane cell process for chloralkali production

Other electrolytic processes edit

Although a much lower production scale is involved, electrolytic diaphragm and membrane technologies are also used industrially to recover chlorine from hydrochloric acid solutions, producing hydrogen (but no caustic alkali) as a co-product.

Furthermore, electrolysis of fused chloride salts (Downs process) also enables chlorine to be produced, in this case as a by-product of the manufacture of metallic sodium or magnesium.

Other methods edit

Before electrolytic methods were used for chlorine production, the direct oxidation of hydrogen chloride with oxygen (frequently through exposure to air) was exercised in the Deacon process:

4 HCl + O2 → 2 Cl2 + 2 H2O

This reaction is accomplished with the use of copper(II) chloride (CuCl2) as a catalyst and is performed at high temperature (about 400 °C). The amount of extracted chlorine is approximately 80%. Due to the extremely corrosive reaction mixture, industrial use of this method is difficult and several pilot trials failed in the past. Nevertheless, recent developments are promising. Recently Sumitomo patented a catalyst for the Deacon process using ruthenium(IV) oxide (RuO2).[10]

Another earlier process to produce chlorine was to heat brine with acid and manganese dioxide.

2 NaCl + 2H2SO4 + MnO2 → Na2SO4 + MnSO4 + 2 H2O + Cl2

Using this process, chemist Carl Wilhelm Scheele was the first to isolate chlorine in a laboratory. The manganese can be recovered by the Weldon process.[11]

Small amounts of chlorine gas can be made in the laboratory by putting concentrated hydrochloric acid in a flask with a side arm and rubber tubing attached. Manganese dioxide is then added and the flask stoppered. The reaction is not greatly exothermic. As chlorine is denser than air, it can be easily collected by placing the tube inside a flask where it will displace the air. Once full, the collecting flask can be stoppered.

Another method for producing small amounts of chlorine gas in a lab is by adding concentrated hydrochloric acid (typically about 5M) to sodium hypochlorite or sodium chlorate solution.

Potassium permanganate can be used to generate chlorine gas when added to hydrochloric acid.

Membrane industrial production edit

Large-scale production of chlorine involves several steps and many pieces of equipment. The description below is typical of a membrane plant. The plant also simultaneously produces sodium hydroxide (caustic soda) and hydrogen gas. A typical plant consists of brine production/treatment, cell operations, chlorine cooling & drying, chlorine compression & liquefaction, liquid chlorine storage & loading, caustic handling, evaporation, storage & loading and hydrogen handling.

Brine edit

Key to the production of chlorine is the operation of the brine saturation/treatment system. Maintaining a properly saturated solution with the correct purity is vital, especially for membrane cells. Many plants have a salt pile which is sprayed with recycled brine. Others have slurry tanks that are fed raw salt and recycled brine. The raw brine is treated with sodium carbonate and sodium hydroxide to precipitate calcium and magnesium. The reactions are often carried out in a series of reactors before the treated brine is sent to a large clarifier where the calcium carbonate and magnesium hydroxide are settled out. A flocculating agent may be added just prior to the clarifier to improve settling. The decanted brine is then mechanically filtered using sand filters or leaf filters before entering a series of ion exchangers to further remove impurities. At several points in this process the brine is tested for hardness and strength.

After the ion exchangers, the brine is considered pure, and is transferred to storage tanks to be pumped into the cell room. The pure brine is heated to the correct temperature to control exit brine temperatures according to the electrical load. Brine exiting the cell room must be treated to remove residual chlorine and control pH levels before being returned to the saturation stage. This can be accomplished via dechlorination towers with acid and sodium bisulfite addition. Failure to remove chlorine can result in damage to the ion exchange units. Brine should be monitored for accumulation of both chlorate anions and sulfate anions, and either have a treatment system in place, or purging of the brine loop to maintain safe levels, since chlorate anions can diffuse through the membranes and contaminate the caustic, while sulfate anions can damage the anode surface coating.

Cell room edit

The building that houses the many electrolytic cells is usually called a cell room or cell house, although some plants are built outdoors. This building contains support structures for the cells, connections for supplying electrical power to the cells and piping for the fluids. Monitoring and control of the temperatures of the feed caustic and brine is done to control exit temperatures. Also monitored are the voltages of each cell which vary with the electrical load on the cell room that is used to control the rate of production. Monitoring and control of the pressures in the chlorine and hydrogen headers is also done via pressure control valves.

Direct current is supplied via a rectified power source. Plant load is controlled by varying the current to the cells. As the current is increased, flow rates for brine and caustic and deionized water are increased, while lowering the feed temperatures.

Cooling and drying edit

Chlorine gas exiting the cell line must be cooled and dried since the exit gas can be over 80°C and contains moisture that allows chlorine gas to be corrosive to iron piping. Cooling the gas allows for a large amount of moisture from the brine to condense out of the gas stream. Cooling also improves the efficiency of both the compression and the liquefaction stage that follows. Chlorine exiting is ideally between 18°C and 25°C. After cooling the gas stream passes through a series of towers with counter flowing sulfuric acid. These towers progressively remove any remaining moisture from the chlorine gas. After exiting the drying towers the chlorine is filtered to remove any remaining sulfuric acid.

Compression and liquefaction edit

Several methods of compression may be used: liquid ring, reciprocating, or centrifugal. The chlorine gas is compressed at this stage and may be further cooled by inter- and after-coolers. After compression it flows to the liquefiers, where it is cooled enough to liquefy. Non condensible gases and remaining chlorine gas are vented off as part of the pressure control of the liquefaction systems. These gases are routed to a gas scrubber, producing sodium hypochlorite, or used in the production of hydrochloric acid (by combustion with hydrogen) or ethylene dichloride (by reaction with ethylene).

Storage and loading edit

Liquid chlorine is typically gravity-fed to storage tanks. It can be loaded into rail or road tankers via pumps or padded with compressed dry gas.

Caustic handling, evaporation, storage and loading edit

Caustic, fed to the cell room flows in a loop that is simultaneously bled off to storage with a part diluted with deionized water and returned to the cell line for strengthening within the cells. The caustic exiting the cell line must be monitored for strength, to maintain safe concentrations. Too strong or too weak a solution may damage the membranes. Membrane cells typically produce caustic in the range of 30% to 33% by weight. The feed caustic flow is heated at low electrical loads to control its exit temperature. Higher loads require the caustic to be cooled, to maintain correct exit temperatures. The caustic exiting to storage is pulled from a storage tank and may be diluted for sale to customers who require weak caustic or for use on site. Another stream may be pumped into a multiple effect evaporator set to produce commercial 50% caustic. Rail cars and tanker trucks are loaded at loading stations via pumps.

Hydrogen handling edit

Hydrogen produced as a byproduct may be vented unprocessed directly to the atmosphere or cooled, compressed and dried for use in other processes on site or sold to a customer via pipeline, cylinders or trucks. Some possible uses include the manufacture of hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide, as well as desulfurization of petroleum, or use as a fuel in boilers or fuel cells.

Energy consumption edit

Production of chlorine is extremely energy intensive.[12] Energy consumption per unit weight of product is not far below that for iron and steel manufacture[13] and greater than for the production of glass[14] or cement.[15]

Since electricity is an indispensable raw material for the production of chlorine, the energy consumption corresponding to the electrochemical reaction cannot be reduced. Energy savings arise primarily through applying more efficient technologies and reducing ancillary energy use. Greenhouse gas emissions of the overall process thus depend largely on the way the electricity is produced. If hydropower, nuclear power or other low carbon sources are used, emissions will be much lower than if fossil fuels are used.

References edit

  1. ^ Pauling, Linus, General Chemistry, 1970 ed., Dover publications
  2. ^ "Electrolytic Processes for Chlorine and Caustic Soda". Lenntech Water treatment & air purification Holding B.V., Rotterdamseweg 402 M, 2629 HH Delft, The Netherlands. Retrieved 2007-03-17.
  3. ^ . Euro Chlor. Archived from the original on 2011-09-18. Retrieved 2007-08-15.
  4. ^ Landolt, D.; Ibl, N. (1972). "Anodic chlorate formation on platinized titanium". Journal of Applied Electrochemistry. 2 (3). Chapman and Hall Ltd.: 201–210. doi:10.1007/BF02354977.
  5. ^ (PDF). UNEP. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-10-29. Retrieved 2007-10-28.
  6. ^ . Euro Chlor. Archived from the original on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2007-08-15.
  7. ^ . Salt Manufacturers' Association. Archived from the original on 2007-05-14. Retrieved 2007-03-17.
  8. ^ a b Kiefer, David M. "When the Industry Charged Ahead". Chemistry Chronicles. Retrieved 2007-03-17.
  9. ^ . Euro Chlor. Archived from the original on 2007-08-14. Retrieved 2007-08-15.
  10. ^ López, Núria (2008). "Mechanism of HCl oxidation (Deacon process) over RuO2". Journal of Catalysis. 255: 29–39. doi:10.1016/j.jcat.2008.01.020.
  11. ^ "The Chlorine Industry". Lenntech Water treatment & air purification Holding B.V., Rotterdamseweg 402 M, 2629 HH Delft, The Netherlands. Retrieved 2007-03-17.
  12. ^ . European Commission. Archived from the original on 2010-07-01. Retrieved 2007-09-02.
  13. ^ . European Commission. Archived from the original on 2007-09-28. Retrieved 2007-09-02.
  14. ^ . European Commission. Archived from the original on 2010-07-01. Retrieved 2007-09-02.
  15. ^ . European Commission. Archived from the original on 2010-07-01. Retrieved 2007-09-02.

External links edit

  • Production of chlorine gas and demonstration of its oxidizing properties

chlorine, production, this, article, lead, section, short, adequately, summarize, points, please, consider, expanding, lead, provide, accessible, overview, important, aspects, article, december, 2023, chlorine, produced, extracting, from, natural, materials, i. This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article December 2023 Chlorine gas can be produced by extracting from natural materials including the electrolysis of a sodium chloride solution brine and other ways Contents 1 Gas extraction 1 1 Mercury cell electrolysis 1 2 Diaphragm cell electrolysis bipolar 1 3 Membrane cell electrolysis 1 4 Other electrolytic processes 2 Other methods 3 Membrane industrial production 3 1 Brine 3 2 Cell room 3 3 Cooling and drying 3 4 Compression and liquefaction 3 5 Storage and loading 3 6 Caustic handling evaporation storage and loading 3 7 Hydrogen handling 3 8 Energy consumption 4 References 5 External linksGas extraction editChlorine can be manufactured by the electrolysis of a sodium chloride solution brine which is known as the Chloralkali process The production of chlorine results in the co products caustic soda sodium hydroxide NaOH and hydrogen gas H2 These two products as well as chlorine itself are highly reactive Chlorine can also be produced by the electrolysis of a solution of potassium chloride in which case the co products are hydrogen and caustic potash potassium hydroxide There are three industrial methods for the extraction of chlorine by electrolysis of chloride solutions all proceeding according to the following equations Cathode 2 H aq 2 e H2 g Anode 2 Cl aq Cl2 g 2 e Overall process 2 NaCl or KCl 2 H2O Cl2 H2 2 NaOH or KOH Mercury cell electrolysis edit nbsp Castner Kellner cell Sodium chloride is electrolyzed between the A anode and M mercury cathode in the side cells with chlorine bubbling up into the space above the NaCl and the sodium dissolving in the mercury The sodium mercury amalgam flows to the center cell where it reacts with water to produce sodium hydroxide and regenerate the mercury Mercury cell electrolysis also known as the Castner Kellner process was the first method used at the end of the nineteenth century to produce chlorine on an industrial scale 1 2 The rocking cells used have been improved over the years 3 Today in the primary cell titanium anodes clad with platinum 4 or conductive metal oxides formerly graphite anodes are placed in a sodium or potassium chloride solution flowing over a liquid mercury cathode When a potential difference is applied and current flows chlorine is released at the titanium anode and sodium or potassium dissolves in the mercury cathode forming an amalgam This flows continuously into a separate reactor denuder or secondary cell where it is usually converted back to mercury by reaction with water producing hydrogen and sodium or potassium hydroxide at a commercially useful concentration 50 by weight The mercury is then recycled to the primary cell by a pump situated at the bottom The mercury process is the least energy efficient of the three main technologies mercury diaphragm and membrane and there are also concerns about mercury emissions It is estimated that there are still around 100 mercury cell plants operating worldwide In Japan mercury based chloralkali production was virtually phased out by 1987 except for the last two potassium chloride units shut down in 2003 In the United States there will be only five mercury plants remaining in operation by the end of 2008 In Europe mercury cells accounted for 43 of capacity in 2006 and Western European producers have committed to closing or converting all remaining chloralkali mercury plants by 2020 5 Diaphragm cell electrolysis bipolar edit In diaphragm cell electrolysis an asbestos or polymer fiber diaphragm separates a cathode and an anode preventing the chlorine forming at the anode from re mixing with the sodium hydroxide and the hydrogen formed at the cathode 6 This technology was also developed at the end of the nineteenth century There are several variants of this process the Le Sueur cell 1893 the Hargreaves Bird cell 1901 the Gibbs cell 1908 and the Townsend cell 1904 7 8 The cells vary in construction and placement of the diaphragm with some having the diaphragm in direct contact with the cathode The salt solution is continuously fed to the anode compartment and flows through the diaphragm to the cathode compartment where the caustic alkali is produced and the brine is partially depleted As a result diaphragm methods produce alkali that is quite dilute about 12 and of lower purity than do mercury cell methods Diaphragm cells are not burdened with the problem of preventing mercury discharge into the environment they also operate at a lower voltage resulting in an energy savings over the mercury cell method 8 but large amounts of steam are required if the caustic has to be evaporated to the commercial concentration of 50 Membrane cell electrolysis edit Development of this technology began in the 1970s The electrolysis cell is divided into two sections by a cation permeable membrane acting as a cation exchanger Saturated sodium or potassium chloride solution is passed through the anode compartment leaving at a lower concentration 9 Sodium or potassium hydroxide solution is circulated through the cathode compartment exiting at a higher concentration A portion of the concentrated sodium hydroxide solution leaving the cell is diverted as product while the remainder is diluted with deionized water and passed through the electrolysis apparatus again This method is more efficient than the diaphragm cell and produces very pure sodium or potassium hydroxide at about 32 concentration but requires very pure brine nbsp Membrane cell process for chloralkali production Other electrolytic processes edit Although a much lower production scale is involved electrolytic diaphragm and membrane technologies are also used industrially to recover chlorine from hydrochloric acid solutions producing hydrogen but no caustic alkali as a co product Furthermore electrolysis of fused chloride salts Downs process also enables chlorine to be produced in this case as a by product of the manufacture of metallic sodium or magnesium Other methods editBefore electrolytic methods were used for chlorine production the direct oxidation of hydrogen chloride with oxygen frequently through exposure to air was exercised in the Deacon process 4 HCl O2 2 Cl2 2 H2O This reaction is accomplished with the use of copper II chloride CuCl2 as a catalyst and is performed at high temperature about 400 C The amount of extracted chlorine is approximately 80 Due to the extremely corrosive reaction mixture industrial use of this method is difficult and several pilot trials failed in the past Nevertheless recent developments are promising Recently Sumitomo patented a catalyst for the Deacon process using ruthenium IV oxide RuO2 10 Another earlier process to produce chlorine was to heat brine with acid and manganese dioxide 2 NaCl 2H2SO4 MnO2 Na2SO4 MnSO4 2 H2O Cl2 Using this process chemist Carl Wilhelm Scheele was the first to isolate chlorine in a laboratory The manganese can be recovered by the Weldon process 11 Small amounts of chlorine gas can be made in the laboratory by putting concentrated hydrochloric acid in a flask with a side arm and rubber tubing attached Manganese dioxide is then added and the flask stoppered The reaction is not greatly exothermic As chlorine is denser than air it can be easily collected by placing the tube inside a flask where it will displace the air Once full the collecting flask can be stoppered Another method for producing small amounts of chlorine gas in a lab is by adding concentrated hydrochloric acid typically about 5M to sodium hypochlorite or sodium chlorate solution Potassium permanganate can be used to generate chlorine gas when added to hydrochloric acid Membrane industrial production editLarge scale production of chlorine involves several steps and many pieces of equipment The description below is typical of a membrane plant The plant also simultaneously produces sodium hydroxide caustic soda and hydrogen gas A typical plant consists of brine production treatment cell operations chlorine cooling amp drying chlorine compression amp liquefaction liquid chlorine storage amp loading caustic handling evaporation storage amp loading and hydrogen handling Brine edit Key to the production of chlorine is the operation of the brine saturation treatment system Maintaining a properly saturated solution with the correct purity is vital especially for membrane cells Many plants have a salt pile which is sprayed with recycled brine Others have slurry tanks that are fed raw salt and recycled brine The raw brine is treated with sodium carbonate and sodium hydroxide to precipitate calcium and magnesium The reactions are often carried out in a series of reactors before the treated brine is sent to a large clarifier where the calcium carbonate and magnesium hydroxide are settled out A flocculating agent may be added just prior to the clarifier to improve settling The decanted brine is then mechanically filtered using sand filters or leaf filters before entering a series of ion exchangers to further remove impurities At several points in this process the brine is tested for hardness and strength After the ion exchangers the brine is considered pure and is transferred to storage tanks to be pumped into the cell room The pure brine is heated to the correct temperature to control exit brine temperatures according to the electrical load Brine exiting the cell room must be treated to remove residual chlorine and control pH levels before being returned to the saturation stage This can be accomplished via dechlorination towers with acid and sodium bisulfite addition Failure to remove chlorine can result in damage to the ion exchange units Brine should be monitored for accumulation of both chlorate anions and sulfate anions and either have a treatment system in place or purging of the brine loop to maintain safe levels since chlorate anions can diffuse through the membranes and contaminate the caustic while sulfate anions can damage the anode surface coating Cell room edit The building that houses the many electrolytic cells is usually called a cell room or cell house although some plants are built outdoors This building contains support structures for the cells connections for supplying electrical power to the cells and piping for the fluids Monitoring and control of the temperatures of the feed caustic and brine is done to control exit temperatures Also monitored are the voltages of each cell which vary with the electrical load on the cell room that is used to control the rate of production Monitoring and control of the pressures in the chlorine and hydrogen headers is also done via pressure control valves Direct current is supplied via a rectified power source Plant load is controlled by varying the current to the cells As the current is increased flow rates for brine and caustic and deionized water are increased while lowering the feed temperatures Cooling and drying edit Chlorine gas exiting the cell line must be cooled and dried since the exit gas can be over 80 C and contains moisture that allows chlorine gas to be corrosive to iron piping Cooling the gas allows for a large amount of moisture from the brine to condense out of the gas stream Cooling also improves the efficiency of both the compression and the liquefaction stage that follows Chlorine exiting is ideally between 18 C and 25 C After cooling the gas stream passes through a series of towers with counter flowing sulfuric acid These towers progressively remove any remaining moisture from the chlorine gas After exiting the drying towers the chlorine is filtered to remove any remaining sulfuric acid Compression and liquefaction edit Several methods of compression may be used liquid ring reciprocating or centrifugal The chlorine gas is compressed at this stage and may be further cooled by inter and after coolers After compression it flows to the liquefiers where it is cooled enough to liquefy Non condensible gases and remaining chlorine gas are vented off as part of the pressure control of the liquefaction systems These gases are routed to a gas scrubber producing sodium hypochlorite or used in the production of hydrochloric acid by combustion with hydrogen or ethylene dichloride by reaction with ethylene Storage and loading edit Liquid chlorine is typically gravity fed to storage tanks It can be loaded into rail or road tankers via pumps or padded with compressed dry gas Caustic handling evaporation storage and loading edit Caustic fed to the cell room flows in a loop that is simultaneously bled off to storage with a part diluted with deionized water and returned to the cell line for strengthening within the cells The caustic exiting the cell line must be monitored for strength to maintain safe concentrations Too strong or too weak a solution may damage the membranes Membrane cells typically produce caustic in the range of 30 to 33 by weight The feed caustic flow is heated at low electrical loads to control its exit temperature Higher loads require the caustic to be cooled to maintain correct exit temperatures The caustic exiting to storage is pulled from a storage tank and may be diluted for sale to customers who require weak caustic or for use on site Another stream may be pumped into a multiple effect evaporator set to produce commercial 50 caustic Rail cars and tanker trucks are loaded at loading stations via pumps Hydrogen handling edit Hydrogen produced as a byproduct may be vented unprocessed directly to the atmosphere or cooled compressed and dried for use in other processes on site or sold to a customer via pipeline cylinders or trucks Some possible uses include the manufacture of hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide as well as desulfurization of petroleum or use as a fuel in boilers or fuel cells Energy consumption edit Production of chlorine is extremely energy intensive 12 Energy consumption per unit weight of product is not far below that for iron and steel manufacture 13 and greater than for the production of glass 14 or cement 15 Since electricity is an indispensable raw material for the production of chlorine the energy consumption corresponding to the electrochemical reaction cannot be reduced Energy savings arise primarily through applying more efficient technologies and reducing ancillary energy use Greenhouse gas emissions of the overall process thus depend largely on the way the electricity is produced If hydropower nuclear power or other low carbon sources are used emissions will be much lower than if fossil fuels are used References edit Pauling Linus General Chemistry 1970 ed Dover publications Electrolytic Processes for Chlorine and Caustic Soda Lenntech Water treatment amp air purification Holding B V Rotterdamseweg 402 M 2629 HH Delft The Netherlands Retrieved 2007 03 17 Mercury cell Euro Chlor Archived from the original on 2011 09 18 Retrieved 2007 08 15 Landolt D Ibl N 1972 Anodic chlorate formation on platinized titanium Journal of Applied Electrochemistry 2 3 Chapman and Hall Ltd 201 210 doi 10 1007 BF02354977 Regional Awareness raising Workshop on Mercury Pollution PDF UNEP Archived from the original PDF on 2007 10 29 Retrieved 2007 10 28 Diaphragm cell Euro Chlor Archived from the original on 2007 09 27 Retrieved 2007 08 15 The Electrolysis of Brine Salt Manufacturers Association Archived from the original on 2007 05 14 Retrieved 2007 03 17 a b Kiefer David M When the Industry Charged Ahead Chemistry Chronicles Retrieved 2007 03 17 Membrane cell Euro Chlor Archived from the original on 2007 08 14 Retrieved 2007 08 15 Lopez Nuria 2008 Mechanism of HCl oxidation Deacon process over RuO2 Journal of Catalysis 255 29 39 doi 10 1016 j jcat 2008 01 020 The Chlorine Industry Lenntech Water treatment amp air purification Holding B V Rotterdamseweg 402 M 2629 HH Delft The Netherlands Retrieved 2007 03 17 Integrated Pollution Prevention and Control IPPC Reference Document on Best Available Techniques in the Chlor Alkali Manufacturing Industry European Commission Archived from the original on 2010 07 01 Retrieved 2007 09 02 Integrated Pollution Prevention and Control IPPC Best Available Techniques Reference Document on the Production of Iron and Steel European Commission Archived from the original on 2007 09 28 Retrieved 2007 09 02 Integrated Pollution Prevention and Control IPPC Reference Document on Best Available Techniques in the Glass Manufacturing Industry European Commission Archived from the original on 2010 07 01 Retrieved 2007 09 02 Integrated Pollution Prevention and Control IPPC Reference Document on Best Available Techniques in the Cement and Lime Manufacturing Industries European Commission Archived from the original on 2010 07 01 Retrieved 2007 09 02 External links edit nbsp Look up chlorine in Wiktionary the free dictionary Production of chlorine gas and demonstration of its oxidizing properties Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chlorine production amp oldid 1221353264, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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