Garden Dirt, Palm Trees And Ammonia - Making Nickel In The Jungles Of Cuba (Nicaro: The First 20 Years)

The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Larry Southwick
Organization:
The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Pages:
1
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74 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2006

Abstract

In the early 1940's, the Caron ammonia ? ammonia carbonate leach process was used to produce nickel from Mayari ores at the Nicaro plant in Oriente Province, Cuba. While plant operation was generally successful, it was not broadly economical and was shut down. The plant was later restarted in the 1950's and a number of investigations initiated to resolve the more serious operational and performance issues. Processing steps studied included iron reduction (chemistry ? nickel and iron, reductant, equipment), ore variability (homogeneity and consistency of mineral concentrations, serpentine vs. laterite), leach solution strength, nickel recovery (temperature ? reduction and leaching, reoxidation) and a variety of other topics. These studies and their findings will be discussed. Caron himself obtained good results on these ores in the laboratory. They could not be duplicated in the field, the reasons for which will be reviewed. (Note: the ore looked like garden dirt; charcoal made from palm trees was one of the reductants attempted; and ammonia was the leach solution. Mixing the three, so to speak, was to yield nickel.)
Citation

APA: Larry Southwick  (2006)  Garden Dirt, Palm Trees And Ammonia - Making Nickel In The Jungles Of Cuba (Nicaro: The First 20 Years)

MLA: Larry Southwick Garden Dirt, Palm Trees And Ammonia - Making Nickel In The Jungles Of Cuba (Nicaro: The First 20 Years). The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 2006.

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