Maison » Hall-Héroult Process

Hall-Héroult Process

1886-04-23
  • Charles Martin Hall
  • Paul Héroult

The Hall-Héroult process is the major industrial method for smelting aluminum. It involves dissolving alumina (aluminum oxide, Al₂O₃) in molten cryolite (Na₃AlF₆) and electrolyzing the molten salt bath. Aluminum metal is deposited at the cathode, while oxygen from the alumina reacts with the carbon anode, producing carbon dioxide. This process made aluminum widely available and affordable.

Before the Hall-Héroult process, aluminum was considered a precious metal, more valuable than gold, due to the extreme difficulty of extracting it from its ore. The process operates at high temperatures, around 940–980 °C, inside large electrolytic cells called pots. Alumina has a very high melting point (over 2000 °C), making direct electrolysis impractical. The key innovation was using molten cryolite as a solvent, which dissolves alumina and has a much lower melting point, significantly reducing the energy required.

The cell consists of a steel shell lined with carbon, which serves as the cathode. Carbon blocks suspended in the electrolyte bath act as the anode. During electrolysis, aluminum ions from the dissolved alumina are reduced at the cathode, forming molten aluminum which sinks to the bottom of the pot and is periodically tapped off: [latex]Al^{3+} + 3e^- \rightarrow Al(l)[/latex]. At the anode, oxide ions are oxidized to form oxygen gas. This oxygen immediately reacts with the hot carbon anode, forming carbon dioxide: [latex]2O^{2-} + C(s) \rightarrow CO_2(g) + 4e^-[/latex]. Because the carbon anodes are consumed in the process, they must be replaced regularly. The overall reaction is [latex]2Al_2O_3 + 3C \rightarrow 4Al + 3CO_2[/latex].

The process is extremely energy-intensive, consuming a significant portion of the world’s electricity. This is why aluminum smelters are often located near sources of inexpensive hydroelectric power. The high energy consumption also makes recycling aluminum highly advantageous, as it requires only about 5% of the energy needed to produce primary aluminum from ore.

UNESCO Nomenclature: 3305
– Chemical engineering

Type

Industrial Process

Disruption

Revolutionary

Utilisation

Widespread Use

Precursors

  • isolation of aluminum by hans christian Ørsted and friedrich wöhler using chemical reduction
  • bayer process for refining bauxite into alumina
  • michael faraday’s work on electrolysis
  • invention of the dynamo by michael faraday, enabling large-scale electricity generation

Applications

  • production of nearly all the world’s aluminum
  • aerospace industry for aircraft frames
  • automotive industry for engine blocks and body panels
  • construction for window frames and structural elements
  • packaging for beverage cans and foils

Brevets :

  • US400664

Potential Innovations Ideas

!niveaux !!! Adhésion obligatoire

Vous devez être membre de l'association pour accéder à ce contenu.

S’inscrire maintenant

Vous êtes déjà membre ? Connectez-vous ici
Related to: hall-héroult process, aluminum, alumina, cryolite, smelting, electrolysis, electrometallurgy, bauxite

Laisser un commentaire

Votre adresse e-mail ne sera pas publiée. Les champs obligatoires sont indiqués avec *

DISPONIBLE POUR DE NOUVEAUX DÉFIS
Ingénieur mécanique, chef de projet ou de R&D
Développement de produits efficace

Disponible pour un nouveau défi dans un court délai.
Contactez-moi sur LinkedIn
Intégration électronique métal-plastique, Conception à coût réduit, BPF, Ergonomie, Appareils et consommables de volume moyen à élevé, Secteurs réglementés, CE et FDA, CAO, Solidworks, Lean Sigma Black Belt, ISO 13485 médical

Nous recherchons un nouveau sponsor

 

Votre entreprise ou institution est dans le domaine de la technique, de la science ou de la recherche ?
> envoyez-nous un message <

Recevez tous les nouveaux articles
Gratuit, pas de spam, email non distribué ni revendu

ou vous pouvez obtenir votre adhésion complète - gratuitement - pour accéder à tout le contenu restreint >ici<

Historical Context

(if date is unknown or not relevant, e.g. "fluid mechanics", a rounded estimation of its notable emergence is provided)

Related Invention, Innovation & Technical Principles

Retour en haut

Vous aimerez peut-être aussi