Betterton–Kroll process
The Betterton–Kroll Process is a pyrometallurgical process for refining lead from lead bullion. Developed by William Justin Kroll in 1922, the Betterton–Kroll process is one of the final steps in conventional lead smelting. After gold, copper, and silver are removed from the lead, significant amounts of bismuth and antimony remain. The Betterton–Kroll process is used to remove these impurities. In the process, calcium and magnesium are added to the molten lead at temperatures around 380 °C. The calcium and magnesium react with the bismuth and antimony in the bullion to form alloys with a higher melting point, which then can be skimmed off of the surface. This process leaves behind lead with less than 0.01 percent bismuth by weight. The process is crucial to cheap industrial lead smelting and offers significant advantages over more expensive processes like the Betts Electrolytic process and fractional crystallization.
Development
In the early 1920s, William Justin Kroll developed a process for removing bismuth from lead by the addition of calcium. However, it was not commercially viable until Jesse Oatman Betterton improved the process by adding magnesium to the process, which decreased the total amount of metal required in order to refine the lead.Chemical process
The key to the Betterton–Kroll process is adding calcium and magnesium metal to molten lead bullion. The metals react with impurities in the lead and form a solid film on the surface, which can be easily removed, leaving behind much purer lead.Metal addition
The Betterton–Kroll process begins by heating lead bullion to around 500 °C. A calcium-magnesium alloy is added to the solution, which melts into the bullion in 15–20 minutes. The lead mixture is then cooled to the liquidus point, which around 320-380 °C. At the lower temperature, the calcium and magnesium react with bismuth and antimony in the lead bullion in the following way:Removal of dross
The alloys produced have a melting point greater than the rest of the metal, so they form a solid film, or dross, on the surface that can be skimmed off. Molten lead can remain trapped in the dross, so the dross is often hydraulically pressed in order to squeeze out any remaining lead. Through this process, the bismuth in solution can be reduced to under 0.01 wt. %.Bismuth recovery
After the dross is skimmed off, it can be treated to recover the bismuth. The most common process for this is chlorination of the calcium-magnesium-bismuth alloy. In the chlorination process, chlorine reacts with other metals in the dross and leaves behind high-purity bismuth.Variations and alternatives
Although the Betterton–Kroll process is the most widely used method, it has variations and alternatives that can provide advantages for specific use cases.Molten salt reactions
Instead of calcium and magnesium metal being added directly to the mixture, oxides of the metals mixed with other molten salts can be added to the solution. Once in the mixture at high temperature, electrodes can be used to decompose the salts into the metal and oxygen gas, so the calcium and magnesium are free to form alloys in the solution. For calcium oxide, the reaction that occurs is:Because the calcium is produced by a reaction and doesn't spend time exposed to air, method prevents loss from oxidation. Another advantage of this method is that salts of calcium are often cheaper than calcium metal.