There
are three methods used to produce salt, solar, evaporation
and rock mining.
Solar Evaporation Method
This is the oldest method of salt production. It has been
used since salt crystals were first noticed in trapped pools
of sea water. Its use is practical only in warm climates where
the evaporation rate exceeds the precipitation rate, either
annually or for extended periods, and ideally, where there
are steady prevailing winds. Solar salt production is, typically,
the capturing of salt water in shallow ponds where the sun
evaporates most of the water. The concentrated brine precipitates
the salt which is then gathered by mechanical harvesting machines.
Any impurities that may be present in the brine are drained
off and discarded prior to harvesting.
Usually two types of ponds are used. First is the concentrating
pond, where the salty water from the ocean or salt lake is
concentrated. The second is called the crystallizing pond,
where the salt is actually produced.
Crystallizing ponds range from to 40 to 200 acres with a
foot-thick floor of salt resulting from years of depositions.
During the salt-making season of four to five months, brine
flows continuously through these ponds. This is a saturated
brine solution, containing as much salt as it can hold, so
pure salt crystallizes out of the solution as the water evaporates.
Natural chemical impurities are returned to the salt water
source.
Rock Salt Mining Method
Morton also uses the second oldest method of producing salt – underground
mining. This is probably the most dramatic method of gathering
salt. Large machines travel through vast cave-like passageways
performing various operations.
Salt mines are among the safest of mines. They are also the
most comfortable to work in. While mine temperature varies
with depth, the average temperature remains about 70° F
year round.
Salt may appear in veins, as does coal. Veins are the original
bedded salt deposits. Salt also may be found in domes, which
were formed when Earth pressures forced salt up through cracks
in the bedrock from depths as great as 30,000 or 40,000 feet;
they resemble plugs of almost-circular shape a few hundred
yards to a mile across. Some domes occur close to the surface.
Both domes and veins are mined in a similar way. Most domes
in North America are located in the south from Alabama to Texas
with many out under water in the Gulf of Mexico .
To enter a salt mine, miners go down a shaft from the Earth’s
surface to the salt bed. There are two shafts in each Morton
mine – one for personnel and one to lower materials and
equipment into the mine, as well as to hoist the mined rock
salt to the surface. The shafts also are used to deliver a
constant supply of fresh air to the miners while they work
hundreds to thousands of feet below the surface. Most mine
shafts are lined with a concrete wall called a shaft liner.
Salt is mined by the room and pillar method. It is removed
in a checkerboard pattern to leave permanent, solid salt pillars
for mine roof support. Usually 45 to 65 percent of the salt
is removed. The room height may average 18 feet in a bedded
deposit to 100 feet in a dome mine.
Normally, the first operation is undercutting. Large machines
cut a slot 10 or more feet in depth across the bottom of a
solid salt wall. This leaves a smooth floor for picking up
the salt after blasting.
Next, small holes are drilled into the salt wall to a depth
of 10 or more feet and explosives are loaded into the drilled
holes. After the work shift, the explosives are set off electrically.
Several hundred to several thousand of tons of rock salt are
blasted and fall onto the mine floor.
Equipment is used to load and haul the salt to machines that
crush and feed the salt onto a conveyor belt. The lumps are
conveyed to a series of stations for crushing and additional
sizing of the lumps. The salt is then placed in a storage bin
to await hoisting to the surface.
The above ground processing of the rock salt consists of
screening the mined salt into various marketable sizes by sorting
through mechanically operated screens. When separated, each
size is conveyed to its individual storage bin to await packaging
for shipment or to be loaded as bulk salt into railroad cars,
trucks, river barges or lake boats for shipment to customers.
Vacuum Evaporation Method
Another method of salt production used by Morton Salt is
the evaporation of salt brine by steam heat in large commercial
evaporators, called vacuum pans. This method yields a very
high purity salt, fine in texture, and principally used in
those applications requiring the highest quality salt.
The first part of the operation is known as solution mining.
Wells are drilled from several hundred to 1,000 feet apart
into the salt deposit. These wells are connected via lateral
drilling, a recently developed technology. Once the wells are
connected, the solution mining operation begins: water is pumped
down one well, the salt below is dissolved, and the resulting
brine is forced to the surface through the other well. It is
then piped into large tanks for storage.
Next, the brine is pumped into vacuum pans. These are huge
closed vessels under vacuum about three stories high. They
are normally arranged in a series of three, four or five, with
each one in the line under greater vacuum than the preceding
one. This series of vacuum pans operates on a very simple principle:
Whenever pressure is lowered, the temperature at which water
will boil is also lowered. For instance, under normal air pressure
at sea level, water boils at 212°F. But at ten thousand
feet above sea level, where air pressure is much less, water
boils at 194°F. Vacuum pans may operate at as low as 100°F.
In the vacuum pan process, steam is fed to the first pan.
This causes the brine in the pan to boil. The steam from the
boiling brine is then used to heat the brine in the second
pan. The pressure in the second pan is lower, allowing the
steam made by the boiling in the first pan to boil the brine
in the second pan. The pressure is reduced still further in
each succeeding pan. This allows the steam made by the boiling
brine in the previous pan to boil the brine in the next pan.
While the boiling operation could be done with just one pan,
several pans in a row produce more salt per pound of steam,
thus allowing greater energy efficiency.
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