contact process, modern industrial method of producing sulfuric acid; it has largely replaced the chamber, or lead-chamber, process. Sulfur dioxide and oxygen, passed over a hot catalyst, unite to form sulfur trioxide, which in turn combines with water to make sulfuric acid.
Contact-process plants are of two types. The simpler type, the sulfur-burning contact plants, use sulfur as the raw material. Molten sulfur is burned to form sulfur dioxide, which is cooled, then oxidized, usually in the presence of pellets of porous siliceous material impregnated with vanadium pentoxide and a potassium compound, to form sulfur trioxide at moderately high temperatures.
The other type of contact-process plant produces sulfur dioxide from low-grade, sulfur-bearing materials, such as pyrite. Cooling of the gas is necessary to remove impurities and to condense and remove part of the water vapour, which would dilute the acid product. The sulfur dioxide gas is then dried with concentrated sulfuric acid. As a result of its purification, the gas in this process is cold, instead of hot as in sulfur-burning plants, and must be heated to the temperature at which the catalyst begins to function.