Copper Pyrometallurgy: The Quest For An Environmentally Acceptable Continuous Process

The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
J. C. Yannopoulos
Organization:
The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Pages:
19
File Size:
835 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1983

Abstract

The quest for a continuous copper smelting and converting process, which has been going on for a long time, has not as yet reached its objective. The most recent efforts for the development of a continuous copper?making process started about two decades ago. Among the contending proposed processes, four have been piloted and three of them are currently in operation: the WORCRA process., the NORANDA process, the MITSUBISHI process, the OUTOKUMPU process. The WORCRA process, after some long pilot plant tests, failed to develop as an industrial process: The NORANDA process, as currently operating, is a smelting process and not a continuous copper?making reactor as initially conceived. The MITSUBISHI, although the only continuous process, has not been widely accepted. The OUTOKUMPU process can be applied only to a low iron concentrate feed and co?produces blister and high in copper slag. The thermodynamics of these "continuous" systems and the practical problems of their industrial application are reviewed and discussed. The achievement of efficient and inexpensive environmental control should' be the primary objective of any new process development. A review of the environmental problems of the copper industry indicates that the quest for a continuous smelting and converting furnace should be intensified.
Citation

APA: J. C. Yannopoulos  (1983)  Copper Pyrometallurgy: The Quest For An Environmentally Acceptable Continuous Process

MLA: J. C. Yannopoulos Copper Pyrometallurgy: The Quest For An Environmentally Acceptable Continuous Process. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 1983.

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