Drosrite Plus™ Treatment of Aluminum and Zinc Drosses

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
P. Carabin M. G. Drouet F. Rivard W. S. Ruff
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
11
File Size:
984 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2012

Abstract

"In both the hot rotary-salt-furnace (RSF) treatment of aluminum dross and the cold ball-millsieving (BMS) treatment of zinc dross, enormous amounts of energy and recoverable metal are wasted and large amounts of greenhouse gas are produced. Such wastes and the environment pollution could be avoided by using the DROSRITE PLUS™ technology. Economic and GHG production comparisons between the presently used industrial treatment processes and DROSRITE PLUS™, supported by over one hundred tests conducted in Canada, the US and Europe, are presented. The savings, with DROSRITE PLUS™, would be about $191 and $418 per MT of aluminum and zinc dross, respectively.INTRODUCTIONDross is a material, which forms on the surface of molten non-ferrous metal, such as aluminum or zinc, during melting, metal holding and handling operations when the molten metal is in contact with a reactive atmosphere. Dross normally consists of metal oxides entraining a considerable quantity of molten free (unreacted) metal, and for economic reasons it is desirable to extract the free metal before discarding the residue. In the case of aluminum dross, recovery of the metal is usually carried out by treating the dross in a furnace at a high temperature (Peterson et al., 2002). By contrast, cold zinc dross is crushed in a ball mill followed by sieving to separate the coarse metal portion from the fine oxide residue.The conventional aluminum dross treatment process, using gas or oil-heated rotary salt furnaces (RSF), is thermally inefficient and environmentally unacceptable because of the salt slag and CO2 produced from the combustion of fossil fuels. In the past several years, a number of salt-free processes have been developed and some of these have found limited commercial use (Gripenberg et al., 1994; Lavoie et al., 1990). In all these dross treatment processes, heating of the cold dross in a rotary furnace requires an external energy input that varies between 375 and 2,500 kWh per (metric) tonne of dross. Molten metal separated during processing of the heated dross is tapped, and the remaining solid residue is discharged from the furnace."
Citation

APA: P. Carabin M. G. Drouet F. Rivard W. S. Ruff  (2012)  Drosrite Plus™ Treatment of Aluminum and Zinc Drosses

MLA: P. Carabin M. G. Drouet F. Rivard W. S. Ruff Drosrite Plus™ Treatment of Aluminum and Zinc Drosses. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2012.

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