Skip to main content

Bacanora relies on Veolia to advance Mexico lithium project

Published by , Editorial Assistant
Global Mining Review,


Veolia Water Technologies engineered and designed the production process that recovers lithium carbonate and sulfate of potash from clay deposits using HPD® evaporation and crystallisation systems.

Lithium, a key component for fast-growing rechargeable battery markets, powers everything from consumer electronics to electric cars and energy storage systems.

Although lithium is a relatively abundant metal, high-purity lithium chemicals used by battery makers are rarer because lithium extraction, either from brines or hard rock, consists of a series of complex operations that make design produc-tion rates hard to achieve.

While these issues are also common in other mining sectors, the problems with lithium are compounded because of the reduced number of lithium plants in operation which means that the industry know-how is limited.

To mitigate the risks of the project and confirm that the proposed technical and commercial process is both feasible and scalable, Bacanora, a lithium exploration and development company, relied on Veolia’s deep lithium production expertise to test the process flow sheet developed during the feasibility study and simulate the unit operations planned for the Sonora Lithium Project, an integrated mine in northern Mexico designed to reach a capacity of 17 500 tpa battery grade lithium carbonate operation in its first phase.

Different from most of the world’s lithium which is produced from hard rock mines in Australia or from brines in South America, the lithium at Sonora is mined from clay — a rare type of deposit with the potential to become one of the world’s largest and lowest cost lithium resources.

Integrated to this innovative plant, Veolia designed an evaporation circuit with a double crystallisation sequence featuring HPD® thermal separation technologies to maximise the recovery of potassium sulfate, a specialty fertilizer also known as sulfate of potash (SOP), and sodium sulfate, a valuable salt that is recycled upstream as the reagent in the clay roasting process.

The production line is completed by ion exchange purification, solid-liquid centrifugal separation and drying systems to achieve more than 99.5% battery grade lithium carbonate.

“We are proud to help game-changing miners in search of a partner with the knowhow to produce lithium from a variety of feedstocks. Veolia looks forward to further supporting the transformation of Bacanora into a major supplier of battery grade lithium chemicals,” said Jim Brown, Executive Vice President Veolia Water Technologies Americas.

Veolia’s exhaustive testing program and process design expertise with HPD® evaporation and crystallisation technologies, validated Bacanora’s product purity requirements while removing potassium and converting a waste stream into a high value-added fertilizer.

Because lithium mining is inherently risky, Veolia partners with developers and producers to improve their environmental performance and optimise their operations to help them extract the most economic value out of the production of high purity lithium chemicals.

Read the article online at: https://www.globalminingreview.com/mining/01112019/bacanora-relies-on-veolia-to-advance-mexico-lithium-project/

You might also like

EMI

Electrification in Mining virtual conference

Join us on 16 April 2024 for Global Mining Review's first Electrification in Mining event is an interactive virtual conference, focusing on electrification as the future of sustainable mining and exploring the innovative approaches and technologies being developed to facilitate its implementation.

Register for FREE »

 
 
 

Embed article link: (copy the HTML code below):


 

This article has been tagged under the following:

Lithium mining news