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Extraction of Aluminium

Aluminum is extracted through an electrolysis process using cryolite to lower the melting point of aluminum oxide. Bauxite ore is purified into aluminum oxide, which is dissolved in molten cryolite and electrolyzed using graphite electrodes, producing aluminum metal at the cathode. Oxygen forms at the anode and reacts with the carbon electrodes, requiring frequent replacement and contributing to the high costs of extracting aluminum despite its abundance.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
652 views

Extraction of Aluminium

Aluminum is extracted through an electrolysis process using cryolite to lower the melting point of aluminum oxide. Bauxite ore is purified into aluminum oxide, which is dissolved in molten cryolite and electrolyzed using graphite electrodes, producing aluminum metal at the cathode. Oxygen forms at the anode and reacts with the carbon electrodes, requiring frequent replacement and contributing to the high costs of extracting aluminum despite its abundance.

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Nadita
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Extraction of aluminium

Aluminium is the most abundant metal on Earth. Despite this, it is expensive, largely
because of the amount of electricity used up in the extraction process.

Aluminium ore is called bauxite. The bauxite is purified to yield a white powder,
aluminium oxide, from which aluminium can be extracted.

The extraction is done by electrolysis. But first the aluminium oxide must be made
molten so that electricity can pass through it. Aluminium oxide has a very high melting
point (over 2,000C), so it would be expensive to melt it. Instead, it is dissolved in
molten cryolite, an aluminium compound with a lower melting point than aluminium
oxide. The use of cryolite reduces some of the energy costs involved in extracting
aluminium.

Diagram showing cell for aluminium extraction

The diagram shows an aluminium oxide electrolysis tank. Both the negative electrode
(cathode) and positive electrode (anode) are made of graphite, a form of carbon.

Aluminium metal forms at the negative electrode and sinks to the bottom of the tank,
where it is tapped off.

Oxygen forms at the positive electrodes. This oxygen reacts with the carbon of the
positive electrodes, forming carbon dioxide, and they gradually burn away.
Consequently, the positive electrodes have to be replaced frequently, which adds to the
cost of the process.

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