Data Reconciliation of Current Efficiency in Zinc Electrowinning

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
M. Mahon A. Alfantazi
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
10
File Size:
521 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2014

Abstract

The current efficiency in zinc electrowinning is a key indicator of the performance in a cell house. This is typically measured by comparing the weight of the cathode to the electric current applied over the deposition period. This calculation can be cumbersome because the deposition history of each pulled set of cathodes will be unique. It will depend on the applied current and electrolyte conditions from onset of deposition until the cathode is removed and stripped. Not accounting for these can introduce errors to the calculated current efficiency. To track this history and reconcile the current efficiency, a time based computer process simulation was made of an industrial cell house. Two months of hourly recorded measurements from the cell house were input to the simulation, including current to the cell houses, concentrations, flow rate, and temperature of the purified leach solution. The simulation’s predictions of the concentration of zinc in the circulated, spent, and returned electrolyte all showed good agreement with the industrial data over the two months giving a validated zinc balance. The simulation was then tuned to predict the instantaneous current efficiency for all times, as well as the expected masses for the deposits given their deposition history.
Citation

APA: M. Mahon A. Alfantazi  (2014)  Data Reconciliation of Current Efficiency in Zinc Electrowinning

MLA: M. Mahon A. Alfantazi Data Reconciliation of Current Efficiency in Zinc Electrowinning. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2014.

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