Arsenic Management In The Metallurgical Industry: The Chilean Experience

The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Armando Valenzuela
Organization:
The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Pages:
16
File Size:
228 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2006

Abstract

Arsenic has been a common impurity in copper sulfide concentrates treated pyrometallurgically in Chile, which inevitably during the smelting-converting process reports in the final copper product affecting its properties, but also affecting environment as a very toxic occupational hazard. The enforcement of air quality standards, which regulate pollutants such as sulfur dioxide, particulate matter, and arsenic, has resulted in the implementation of pollution abatement plans and emission reduction schedules mainly by state-owned copper concentrate smelters. Investments associated with these plans incorporated gas-handling systems in order to capture polluting emissions. Electrostatic precipitators recover dusts containing mainly Cu and As which are leached to recover copper, while arsenic is disposed currently in the form of ferric arsenate. Gases containing high sulfur dioxide content are treated in plants to produce sulfuric acid, which is used in various classical and new hydrometallurgical processes. Additionally, smelters have effluents treatment plants for arsenic disposal either as ferric arsenate or calcium arsenate/arsenite. This paper reviews the environmental situation of the Chilean metallurgical industry, and the present trends for arsenic management are particularly emphasized since Chile is the world?s largest copper producer.
Citation

APA: Armando Valenzuela  (2006)  Arsenic Management In The Metallurgical Industry: The Chilean Experience

MLA: Armando Valenzuela Arsenic Management In The Metallurgical Industry: The Chilean Experience. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 2006.

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