Читать книгу Industrial Poisoning from Fumes, Gases and Poisons of Manufacturing Processes - Josef Rambousek - Страница 26
SULPHUR
ОглавлениеRecovery and Use.—Sulphur, which is found principally in Sicily (also in Spain, America, and Japan), is obtained by melting. In Sicily this is carried out in primitive fashion by piling the rock in heaps, covering them with turf, and setting fire to them. About a third of the sulphur burns and escapes as sulphur dioxide, while the remainder is melted and collects in a hole in the ground.
The crude sulphur thus wastefully produced is purified by distillation in cast-iron retorts directly fired. It comes on the market as stick or roll sulphur or as flowers of sulphur.
Further sources for recovery of sulphur are the Leblanc soda residues (see Soda Production), from which the sulphur is recovered by the Chance-Claus process, and the gas purifying material (containing up to 40 per cent.), from which the sulphur can be recovered by carbon bisulphide (see Illuminating Gas Industry).
The health conditions of the Sicilian sulphur workers are very unsatisfactory, due, however, less to the injurious effect of the escaping gases (noxious alike to the surrounding vegetation) than to the wretched social conditions, over exertion, and under feeding of these workers.
Of importance is the risk to health from sulphuretted hydrogen gas, from sulphur dioxide in the recovery of sulphur from the soda residues, and from carbon bisulphide in the extraction of sulphur from the gas purifying material.