Rockwell Automation supports environmentally friendly lithium production to secure UK supply
Published by Isabelle Keltie,
Editorial Assistant
Global Mining Review,
Rockwell Automation, Inc., the world's largest company dedicated to industrial automation and digital transformation, is working with Cornish Lithium Plc on a demonstration plant to validate the sustainable production of lithium hydroxide from micaceous granite. According to the International Energy Agency (IEA), the world could face lithium shortages by 2025. To hit net zero targets by 2050, it is estimated that more than 2 billion electric vehicles are needed worldwide, and these vehicles require lithium for their batteries. However, the lithium resources required to meet this surging demand are concentrated in only a few regions around the globe.
The Cornish Lithium demonstration plant will be controlled by the PlantPAx® modern distributed control system from Rockwell Automation. This modern DCS provides a single, plant-wide control system and increased flexibility for better business decisions.
Phil Hadfield, UK managing director, Rockwell Automation, said: “Rockwell Automation has both the technology and domain expertise to support the complex lithium extraction process. We have successfully worked in lithium projects around the world, including Australia, Africa, and South America. The integrated architecture from Rockwell Automation provides end-to-end system integration. The systems are designed with scalability in mind, leveraging the new advancements in digital technology.”
Cornish Lithium has licensed an acid-leaching, selective precipitation, and crystallisation process developed to create lithium hydroxide from micaceous granite. This process is expected to be more environmentally friendly than the traditional hard rock process, which usually involves a significant calcination step, where the ore is calcined at 1000°C.
The validity of the process has already been tested at a small pilot plant in Australia and proven that it can produce lithium hydroxide monohydrate salt. The next step is constructing a demonstration plant at the site in Cornwall. This will be a complete conceptual end-to-end process from the raw material to lithium hydroxide, using all the same equipment employed in a full-scale facility with just one or two changes for scale reasons. This simulation of the actual process will assure all stakeholders and potential customers of the effectiveness of the processing technology on Cornish ore ahead of the construction of a full-scale production facility.
David Moseley, process manager, hard rock minerals, at Cornish Lithium, added: "Rockwell Automation will play quite a crucial role in what we are doing. We want to try and simulate as much as possible, the industrial process control that we might employ at full scale. We are trying to put as much of that into the demonstration plant as possible because it is a complex multistage process with lots of recycles - and sequential operation, particularly with filtration, and process control is critical. Rockwell Automation is putting together the process control philosophy based on our instrumentation. This is a series of different process control units that must be coordinated to have a plant that will operate effectively."
Cornwall has a rich mining heritage. A large granite outcrop dominates the geology in the southwest of the UK, and because of millennia of geothermal activity, that granite is rich in lithium. As a result, the concentration of certain minerals, such as tin and copper, has been prevalent. Cornwall is also home to a globally significant china clay industry, and that china clay or Kaolin operation exploits the same granite resource.
Two plants will be built; one is a mineral concentration plant where raw ore is crushed, milled, and separated to create lithium-enriched mica concentrate. The second is the chemical plant, with a hydrometallurgical acid leaching system that produces lithium sulfate, which is converted into lithium hydroxide. The chemical plant combines chemical reactors, precipitators, filtration, and crystallisation. The demonstration plant is currently under construction and when commissioned is expected to operate for a year.
Read the article online at: https://www.globalminingreview.com/mining/19042023/rockwell-automation-supports-environmentally-friendly-lithium-production-to-secure-uk-supply/
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