New York Paper - Hot-Blast Smelting for the Elimination of Arsenic, Antimony, Lead and Zinc from Copper-Mattes, and for the Production of Lead

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 5
- File Size:
- 168 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1904
Abstract
Mr. AllaW Gibb, of Mount Perry, Queensland, Australia, in an interesting and instructive paper,* describes fully the great difficulties metallurgists encounter in seeking to produce marketable copper by smelting refractory ores containing arsenic, antimony and bismuth. After reading this description, I prepared a paper for the Institute, which was, however, through a misunderstanding on my part, published in the San Francisco Mining and S'cie~ztiJic Press of April 4, 1903, after its acceptance by the Council, and without credit to the Institute. Consequently, it cannot be reprinted for the Transactions of the Institute; and I can only here summarize its contents and conclusions, referring the reader to the article above named for further particulars. In that article I omitted the col~sideration of bismuth, which we do not encounter in our smelting at Val Verde, and added lead and zinc, which Mr. Gibb had not discussed; and I undertook to shorn, by the record of a year's practice of the Val Verde Copper Co., Arizona, that copper-ores containing arsenic, antimony, lead and zinc may be successfully smelted, without preliminary roasting, in an ordinary blast-furnace with hotblast, making a normal slag, such as one would aim to make under ordinary conditions with cold-blast, so as to produce a marketable matte, containing not less than 45 per cent. of copper, free from arsenic and antimony, and below the limit in lead and zinc penalized by the refineries.
Citation
APA:
(1904) New York Paper - Hot-Blast Smelting for the Elimination of Arsenic, Antimony, Lead and Zinc from Copper-Mattes, and for the Production of LeadMLA: New York Paper - Hot-Blast Smelting for the Elimination of Arsenic, Antimony, Lead and Zinc from Copper-Mattes, and for the Production of Lead. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1904.