Photoetching of nickel alloys and reclamation of waste products

This thesis details a study into the photoetching of nickel alloys with ferric chloride and the reclamation of waste products. Reclamation occurs through the regeneration of the spent etchant and the recovery of the dissolved nickel content. Etchant regeneration is a means by which a constant etchin...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: White, H. J. A.
Other Authors: Allen, David
Language:en
Published: Cranfield University 2016
Online Access:http://dspace.lib.cranfield.ac.uk/handle/1826/11044
id ndltd-CRANFIELD1-oai-dspace.lib.cranfield.ac.uk-1826-11044
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-CRANFIELD1-oai-dspace.lib.cranfield.ac.uk-1826-110442016-11-30T03:29:50ZPhotoetching of nickel alloys and reclamation of waste productsWhite, H. J. A.This thesis details a study into the photoetching of nickel alloys with ferric chloride and the reclamation of waste products. Reclamation occurs through the regeneration of the spent etchant and the recovery of the dissolved nickel content. Etchant regeneration is a means by which a constant etching quality can be maintained. The alternative is its replacement with fresh solution and this option entails the disposal of the exhausted solution according to correct legislative procedures. A cost comparison of both processes, was made in the early stage of this work and a model established to represent the economics of regeneration and conventional disposal (ie. not regenerating) based on the amount of nickel etched per annum. Although the dissolved nickel content will not hinder etchant regeneration, it will affect the quality of subsequent etching and the etchant will remain "contaminated". Consequently, its removal must be considered if etchant regeneration is to be implemented. Therefore, in order to establish the economical viability of nickel removal (and etchant regeneration) it was necessary to investigate potential techniques at an experimental level and to determine their technical feasibility first. Cementation and electrodialysis were investigated, the latter proving to be the more successful technique for this application. Through experimentation, it was possible to determine nickel yield data and the associated chemical and power requirements. This information was then used to calculate the 'costs associated with the process in order to extend the original model.Cranfield UniversityAllen, David2016-11-29T10:04:05Z2016-11-29T10:04:05Z1995-06Thesis or dissertationDoctoralPhDhttp://dspace.lib.cranfield.ac.uk/handle/1826/11044en© Cranfield University, 1995. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced without the written permission of the copyright holder.
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
description This thesis details a study into the photoetching of nickel alloys with ferric chloride and the reclamation of waste products. Reclamation occurs through the regeneration of the spent etchant and the recovery of the dissolved nickel content. Etchant regeneration is a means by which a constant etching quality can be maintained. The alternative is its replacement with fresh solution and this option entails the disposal of the exhausted solution according to correct legislative procedures. A cost comparison of both processes, was made in the early stage of this work and a model established to represent the economics of regeneration and conventional disposal (ie. not regenerating) based on the amount of nickel etched per annum. Although the dissolved nickel content will not hinder etchant regeneration, it will affect the quality of subsequent etching and the etchant will remain "contaminated". Consequently, its removal must be considered if etchant regeneration is to be implemented. Therefore, in order to establish the economical viability of nickel removal (and etchant regeneration) it was necessary to investigate potential techniques at an experimental level and to determine their technical feasibility first. Cementation and electrodialysis were investigated, the latter proving to be the more successful technique for this application. Through experimentation, it was possible to determine nickel yield data and the associated chemical and power requirements. This information was then used to calculate the 'costs associated with the process in order to extend the original model.
author2 Allen, David
author_facet Allen, David
White, H. J. A.
author White, H. J. A.
spellingShingle White, H. J. A.
Photoetching of nickel alloys and reclamation of waste products
author_sort White, H. J. A.
title Photoetching of nickel alloys and reclamation of waste products
title_short Photoetching of nickel alloys and reclamation of waste products
title_full Photoetching of nickel alloys and reclamation of waste products
title_fullStr Photoetching of nickel alloys and reclamation of waste products
title_full_unstemmed Photoetching of nickel alloys and reclamation of waste products
title_sort photoetching of nickel alloys and reclamation of waste products
publisher Cranfield University
publishDate 2016
url http://dspace.lib.cranfield.ac.uk/handle/1826/11044
work_keys_str_mv AT whitehja photoetchingofnickelalloysandreclamationofwasteproducts
_version_ 1718398108588572672