Bulletin 211 The Chloride Volatilization Process of Ore Treatment

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Thomas Varley E. P. Barrett C. C. Stevenson ROBERT H. BRADFORD
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
113
File Size:
6058 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1923

Abstract

The art of treating ores by the chloride volatilization process is still in the experimental stage. The process has not been sufficiently developed along metallurgical lines to warrant a definite statement as to the exact place it will occupy in the industry. The basic theory of the process has received the attention of prominent metallurgists for 20 years, and considerable research and experimental work have been carried on. Much of the experimental work done has never been published; if the accumulated results were made known, they would greatly aid,. the further development of the process. This bulletin aim~ to bring the salient features of the process to the attention of metallurgists for the purpose of furnishing information to and receiving comments from interested parties with the ultimate hope that the process will be a commercial success. If commercially utilized, the process will fill a long-felt want in metallurgy, especially in the treatment of oxidized and semioxidized or" carbonate" ores of copper, lead, and silver. Such ores are difficult to treat by gravity concentration or by flotation: in the former their tendency to slime upon crushing and their being of lower specific gravity than the sulphide minerals cause serious losses; in the latter much has been done in sulphidizing oxidized ores and subsequently recovering the artificial sulphides by flotation. Difficulties in proper sulphidizing and the low recoveries obtained have not balanced the cost of the treatment in many plants and in very few has it proved successful. Evidently there is a big void to fill in the treatment of these ores. No radical changes in present methods are forecast, but it is obvious that chloride volatilization can have a distinct place as a method of treatment for ores that are not readily amenable to present methods. In many plants it might replace concentration methods, especially where part of the mineral content in the ores exists in forms other than sulphides.
Citation

APA: Thomas Varley E. P. Barrett C. C. Stevenson ROBERT H. BRADFORD  (1923)  Bulletin 211 The Chloride Volatilization Process of Ore Treatment

MLA: Thomas Varley E. P. Barrett C. C. Stevenson ROBERT H. BRADFORD Bulletin 211 The Chloride Volatilization Process of Ore Treatment. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1923.

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