Heavy Metal Removal For Water Reuse And Effluent Treatment ? Introduction

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
J. L. Boyd
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
24
File Size:
864 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1975

Abstract

The mining and processing of basic metals relies on water as a medium for transport. Metallurgical ores are ground, concentrated, leached and refined in an aqueous medium. Water is used for temperature control during processing and in air pollution abatement during smelting. All of these process steps result in liquid wastes. Many of the aqueous wastes from ore processing areas become the raw product for a second stage and water recycling may begin. The point at which water recycling or reuse has been initiated in the past, rather than water discharge, was where water conservation was manditory due to a shortage, where process conditions would allow or benefit from reuse, and where economic considerations demanded reuse. The Fontana, California plant of Kaiser Steel Corporation is an example of an integrated steel plant that was forced to practice water conservation and reuse due to its location in an arid environment.1 Only a small amount of water required to maintain the water reuse system in balance with respect to dissolved solids and product quality is discharged. The Butte, Montana copper ore processing plant of The Anaconda Company obtains 66% of the water required for production by recycling, after clarification and chemical treatment, 30 MGD of wastewater from its tailings ponds. This operation is estimated to save the company about $1200/day over a once through water system.2 Here plant location and economics favored water reuse.
Citation

APA: J. L. Boyd  (1975)  Heavy Metal Removal For Water Reuse And Effluent Treatment ? Introduction

MLA: J. L. Boyd Heavy Metal Removal For Water Reuse And Effluent Treatment ? Introduction. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1975.

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