Molecules, Vol. 31, Pages 857: In Situ FBRM Analysis of Additive-Controlled Reactive Crystallization of Lithium Carbonate

Fuente: Molecules - Revista científica (MDPI)
Molecules, Vol. 31, Pages 857: In Situ FBRM Analysis of Additive-Controlled Reactive Crystallization of Lithium Carbonate
Molecules doi: 10.3390/molecules31050857
Authors:
Eder Piceros
Ricardo I. Jeldres
Karien I. García
Pedro Robles
Silvia Bolado
Teófilo A. Graber

This work investigates the reactive crystallization of lithium carbonate (Li2CO3) by rapidly mixing concentrated aqueous solutions of LiCl (3.0–4.0 M) and Na2CO3 (1.5–2.0 M) at 65 °C, using focused beam reflectance measurement (FBRM) for online, in situ monitoring. The effect of low concentrations of poly(acrylic acid) (PAA), sodium hexametaphosphate (SHMP), and sodium tripolyphosphate (STPP) on nucleation and growth dynamics was systematically analyzed. The results show that the process is dominated by an intense initial supersaturation pulse, which governs early nucleation and subsequent population restructuring through growth and aggregation. Additives significantly modify the nucleation-growth coupling: PAA exhibits concentration- and time-dependent behavior, suppressing the detectable fines population and promoting consolidation into coarse fractions under high supersaturation; SHMP acts as a strong kinetic inhibitor, markedly reducing nucleation and, to a greater extent, growth; while STPP exhibits an intermediate, dose-dependent response, maintaining nucleation but limiting effective growth at high concentrations. Scanning electron microscopy observations confirm the formation of spherulitic Li2CO3 aggregates in all cases, with compactness and radial organization dependent on the additive. These results demonstrate that targeted additive selection allows for precise control of population dynamics and solid properties in reactive crystallization systems, within the investigated high-supersaturation concentration window, with useful mechanistic guidance for the design and control of Li2CO3 precipitation processes.