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Molybdates Formation Pathways and Their Roles on Thermal Oxidation of Molybdenite Concentrates
The mainstream oxidative roasting method is facing challenges in processing low-grade molybdenite (MoS 2 ) concentrates, calling for deep understandings toward the behaviors of impurities. This study took pure minerals and reagents as the objects and conducted elaborate experiments and theoretical calculations into the formations of molybdates and their influences on MoS 2 oxidation. The emphasis are on the reactions under local O 2 -absent conditions and the sintering of MoS 2 caused by molybdates of Ca, Fe, Cu, or Pb. It was found that molybdates could directly form from MoO 2 or MoS 2 without O 2 at 600 °C to 650 °C, due to the promotion of reactivity and reducibility of MoO 2 when combining with impurity metals. The produced molybdates would lower the melting point, dissolve in liquid MoO 3 , and migrate to oxidation interface to form a sintering layer that inhibits O 2 diffusion. Overall, this study has discovered new pathways of molybdates formation and new effects of segregation on the sintering and established evolution patterns of bulk MoS 2 concentrate during roasting, which may be significant complements to the fundamentals of classical molybdenum metallurgy.