Cost Factors In The Utilization Of Foreign Bauxite Make Aluminum

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Arthur F. Johnson
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
6
File Size:
689 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 6, 1954

Abstract

THE principal costs of making a pound of aluminum are for 9 kw-hr of electricity and for 1.9 Ib of the oxide (A1203) called alumina. A pound of alumina is made by digesting 2 or 3 lb of bauxite in hot caustic solutions, settling and filtering out the oxides of silicon, iron, and titanium and precipitating and calcining the A1203 as a pure, white powder. The cost of foreign bauxite delivered at an alumina plant in the U.S. may equal or exceed the cost of its chemical treatment to make alumina. Some of the principal factors affecting costs in the utilization of foreign bauxites are: transportation from mine to market, mineralogical and physical composition of the bauxite, thickness of the bauxite beds and their clay and forest overburden, amen- ability of the bauxite to beneficiation and to caustic extraction of the alumina, and lastly size of bauxite deposits and rate of mining employed.
Citation

APA: Arthur F. Johnson  (1954)  Cost Factors In The Utilization Of Foreign Bauxite Make Aluminum

MLA: Arthur F. Johnson Cost Factors In The Utilization Of Foreign Bauxite Make Aluminum. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1954.

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