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Table of Contents
 
Summary
Introduction
Physical Properties and Grades
Manufacturing Processes
Sulfur Dioxide Production
Elemental Sulfur
Smelter Off-Gases and Pyrites
Stack Gases
Hydrogen Sulfide
Spent Acid or Sulfuric Acid Sludges
Other
Sulfur Dioxide to Sulfuric Acid
Contact Process
Chamber Process
Refortified or Reused Sulfuric Acid
Environmental Issues
Supply and Demand by Region
World
Capacity
Salient Statistics
Production
Consumption
Trade
United States
Producing Companies
Salient Statistics
Production
Consumption
Fertilizer Use
Wet-process phosphoric acid
Normal superphosphate
Metallurgical Applications
Ore processing
Copper leaching
Uranium/vanadium
Other
Other
Petroleum alkylation
Methyl methacrylate
Ammonium sulfate and caprolactam
Aluminum sulfate
Hydrofluoric acid
Titanium dioxide
Iron and steel industry
Batteries
Cellulosic fibers and plastics
Surface-active agents
Pulp and paper
Water treatment
Hydrochloric acid/sodium and potassium sulfate
Electric utilities
Chlorine drying
Chrome chemicals
Citric acid
Boric acid
Resorcinol
Furfural
Alcohols
Phenol
Miscellaneous
Price
Trade
Canada
Producing Companies
Salient Statistics
Production
Consumption
Mexico
Producing Companies
Salient Statistics
Production
Consumption
Trade
Central and South America
Producing Companies
Salient Statistics
Production
Consumption
Trade
Western Europe
Producing Companies
Salient Statistics
Production
Consumption
Price
Trade
Eastern Europe
Producing Companies
Salient Statistics
Production
Trade
Former USSR
Producing Companies
Salient Statistics
Production
Trade
Africa
Salient Statistics
Production
Trade
Middle East
Salient Statistics
Production
Trade
Southwest Asia
Salient Statistics
Production
Socialist Asia
Producing Companies
Salient Statistics
Production
Trade
Southeast Asia
Producing Companies
Salient Statistics
Production
Trade
Japan
Producing Companies
Salient Statistics
Production
Consumption
Fibers
Titanium Dioxide
Fertilizers
Other
Aluminum sulfate
Hydrofluoric acid
Methyl methacrylate (MMA)
Miscellaneous
Price
Trade
Oceania
Producing Companies
Salient Statistics
Production
Trade
   
  Sulfuric Acid
   
  Bala Suresh and Yoshio Inoguchi
  Published July 2006
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  Abstract
   
 

Sulfuric acid is one of the world’s largest-volume industrial chemicals. The production of phosphate fertilizer materials, especially wet-process phosphoric acid, is the major end-use market for sulfuric acid, accounting for nearly 55% of total world consumption. The balance is consumed in a wide variety of industrial and technical applications. Apparent world sulfuric acid consumption increased by about 29% between 1985 and 2005 despite a 20% decline between 1988 and 1993. A moderate increase of about 2.6% is forecast for the 2005–2010 period, assuming reasonable growth in the current global economic situation. Socialist Asia is the major market, accounting for 23% of world consumption in 2005, followed by the United States, which consumed about 20%. Africa, the former USSR, Central/South America and Western Europe are also large users, each accounting for around 10% of world consumption. Major declines have occurred in the former USSR, Western Europe and Eastern Europe since the late 1980s. A further decline is projected for Western Europe, while a healthy recovery is forecast for the former USSR and Eastern Europe. Major increases occurred in Socialist Asia, Africa, Southeast Asia, Central/South America, Southwest Asia and the Middle East between 1985 and 2005. World sulfuric acid consumption in 2005 was about 190 million metric tons of product with an estimated fob value of about $10 billion.

The following pie chart shows world consumption of sulfuric acid in 2005:

World production and apparent consumption fluctuated between 1985 and 1997. In recent years, the production level has been exhibiting a marginal upward trend. Production and consumption peaked in 1988 and bottomed out in 1993. Total volume has increased by over 40% since 1993 and has surpassed the 1988 level. It is expected to increase by 13% during the forecast period, assuming no major global economic events. The proportion of world production that enters international trade is small, but has doubled to about 5% since 1985.

Increased recovery of by-product sulfuric acid at smelters has had a significant impact on the industry, leading to increased trade in sulfuric acid (since by-product producers are not necessarily located near acid markets) and forcing some sulfur-burning plants to close. One portion of the sulfuric acid business that has grown as a result of environmental restrictions is the portion that regenerates sulfuric acid.

Global demand for sulfuric acid is projected to rise at an annual rate of about 2.6% in the next five years. Fertilizer demand for sulfuric acid is estimated to grow at about 2.4%. Nonfertilizer sulfuric acid demand will come mostly from nickel operations.

 
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