Florida Paper - Treatment of Roasted Gold-Ores by Means of Bromine

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Richard W. Lodge
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
4
File Size:
137 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1896

Abstract

Mr. H. R. Batcheller, of the class of 1894, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, while experimenting with chlorine gas on a certain lot of roasted concentrates, met with the following difficulties: 1. A poor extraction of the gold. 2. A very large consumption of chlorine gas. 3. Inability to precipitate all of the gold from the solutioil containing the AuC1,. 4. The bullion obtained was very base. These difficulties were the same whether the chlorine was generated from H2SO47 MnO29 and salt, or whether H2SO, and bleaching powder were used. They may be accounted for partly by the presence of some arsenic left in the roasted ore, and partly by the presence of copper in the solution containing the AuCI3. It was therefore suggested to try the effect of bromine on a similar lot of ore. The use of this element is, of course, nothing new, but in the following experiments it seemed to present many advantages over chlorine. The material worked upon consisted of some concentrates containing 2.31 ounces of gold per ton, and 34.26 per cent. of arsenic, which would correspoild to about 74.4 per cent. Of
Citation

APA: Richard W. Lodge  (1896)  Florida Paper - Treatment of Roasted Gold-Ores by Means of Bromine

MLA: Richard W. Lodge Florida Paper - Treatment of Roasted Gold-Ores by Means of Bromine. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1896.

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