Case study for production of calcium carbonate from carbon dioxide in flue gases and steelmaking slag

2016 
Abstract In this work, a concept for producing calcium carbonate from argon oxygen decarburisation (AOD) slag was further developed. In addition, its economic and environmental feasibility was evaluated. In the studied case, a stainless steel plant generating AOD slag and a paper plant requiring calcium carbonate are situated at a relatively close distance. The studied concept uses ammonium chloride as solvent for extracting calcium from the slag. In a subsequent step, the extracted calcium reacts with CO 2 in lime kiln flue gas and precipitates as calcium carbonate. First, an industrial application of the concept was designed including the following units: a reverse osmosis unit enabling better recovery of ammonium chloride, an evaporator for removing excess water from the process, and a scrubber for removing ammonia vapours from the flue gases. The process was modelled, after which the investment costs and operational costs were estimated, and its environmental footprint was assessed. The results indicate that the process could in its current stage of development be economic for producing calcium carbonate for replacing ground calcium carbonate used by paper mills. If the net annual profit would be used as payment on the investment, the payback period would be 2.2 years. As the process consumes CO 2 the process would have negative CO 2 emissions, avoiding 0.3 t CO 2 per tonne calcium carbonate produced.
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