Industrial Evaluation of Sonic Injection in a Peirce-Smith Converter at the Lonmin Platinum Smelter

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
J. P. T. Kapusta J. Davis G. A. Bezuidenhout S. Lefume D. K. Chibwe
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
16
File Size:
1987 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2012

Abstract

"Although the centennial of the Peirce-Smith (PS) converting process has recently been celebrated, the technology has essentially not changed much since its inception. PS converting is used extensively in the Cu, Ni and PGM industry to remove iron and sulphur from a molten matte phase. A typical PS converting process would use low pressure air supplied by a blower to bubble air through the molten bath. This bubbling injection regime is inherently inefficient from a process and energy consideration. In the late 70’s and early 80’s, Brimacombe and co-workers demonstrated at both laboratory and plant scales that sonic injection (jetting regime) into copper or nickel converters could reduce or eliminate the above hindrances characteristic of PS converting. Since then, in spite of these successes, very little industrial applications have made headway in the converting process of non-ferrous metal mattes on a commercial scale. As part of its operational improvement and energy reduction program (process efficiency), Lonmin Platinum decided to conduct a full scale industrial evaluation of sonic injection using air only to establish if punchless, high efficiency sonic injection was feasible in its small 3.05 × 4.57 m converters (10’ × 15’). A plant trial was run for four weeks in one of its three converters. This paper discusses the plant demonstration with a focus on the experience acquired by Lonmin together with the key learnings from the trials. Reference will also be made to the commercial aspects of a full scale implementation of sonic injection in all three converters in the smelter. INTRODUCTION AND OBJECTIVESAlthough the centennial of the Peirce-Smith (PS) converting process has recently been celebrated (Peirce and Smith, 1909; Southwick, 2009), the technology has essentially not changed much since its inception. PS converting is used extensively in the Cu, Ni and PGM industry to remove iron and sulphur from a molten matte phase. A typical PS converting process would use low pressure air supplied by a blower to bubble air through the molten bath. This bubbling injection regime is inherently inefficient from a process and energy consideration."
Citation

APA: J. P. T. Kapusta J. Davis G. A. Bezuidenhout S. Lefume D. K. Chibwe  (2012)  Industrial Evaluation of Sonic Injection in a Peirce-Smith Converter at the Lonmin Platinum Smelter

MLA: J. P. T. Kapusta J. Davis G. A. Bezuidenhout S. Lefume D. K. Chibwe Industrial Evaluation of Sonic Injection in a Peirce-Smith Converter at the Lonmin Platinum Smelter. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2012.

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