Preparation Of Ore Containing Zinc For The Recovery Of Other Metals Such As Silver, Gold, Copper, And Lead By The Elimination And Subsequent Recovery Of The Zinc As A Chemically Pure Zinc Product. (bf430898-009f-4fc5-926f-5d40bf5f8405)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
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The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
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3
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Publication Date:
Jan 11, 1913

Abstract

Discussion of the paper of S. E. Bretherton, presented at the Butte meeting, August, 1913, and printed in Bulletin No. 80, August, 1913, pp. 1481 to 1487. S. E., BRETHERTON, San Francisco, Cal.:-Since preparing my paper, our chemist, F. L. Wilson, has been experimenting with Leadville, Colo., oxidized zinc ore and Leadville zinc sulphides containing lead, operating upon 40-1b. lots at a time. His results on Leadville sulphides are as follows: The raw ore contained a trace of gold, 5.04 oz. of silver, 19.1 per cent of zinc, and 7.24 per cent of lead. After roasting the ore contained a trace of gold, 5.72 oz. of silver, 0.75 per cent of copper, 21.7 per cent of zinc, and 8.29 per cent of lead. The loss in weight by leaching was 38.8 per cent. The extraction was 42.8 per cent of the copper, 80.6 per cent of the zinc, 7.1 per cent of the lead, 0.64 per cent of the silver, and no gold. The little .silver that is extracted would be thrown down with the copper when precipitating it from the zinc and both thrown hack into the residue to be smelted. There would be no trouble in smelting the residue with nearly all the sulphur eliminated and containing less than 7 per cent. of zinc. On zinc carbonates containing silicates the results are not satisfactory. H. O. HOFMAN, Boston, Mass. (communication to the Secretary*) :¬The paper by Mr. Bretherton upon the application of ammonia and carbonic acid to the recovery of zinc as oxide from roasted sulphide ore is of interest to me, as the first installation of the Schnabel process for the extraction of zinc from a mixture of zinc oxide, lead oxide (with some cupric oxide), and pellets of enriched lead, produced in steaming liquated zinc-silver-lead crust of the Parkes process, was made at Lautenthal, Harz mountains, where I was chemist. In that capacity I carried out numerous experiments on the Schnabel process, was active in the erecting of the plant, and later had charge of it. After the Lautenthal plant had been in operation for some time a similar one was built at Hoboken-les-Anvers, but both have been abandoned, as the wet process could not compete with the distillation of the liquated zinc-silver-lead crust, now used universally in the Parkes process.
Citation

APA:  (1913)  Preparation Of Ore Containing Zinc For The Recovery Of Other Metals Such As Silver, Gold, Copper, And Lead By The Elimination And Subsequent Recovery Of The Zinc As A Chemically Pure Zinc Product. (bf430898-009f-4fc5-926f-5d40bf5f8405)

MLA: Preparation Of Ore Containing Zinc For The Recovery Of Other Metals Such As Silver, Gold, Copper, And Lead By The Elimination And Subsequent Recovery Of The Zinc As A Chemically Pure Zinc Product. (bf430898-009f-4fc5-926f-5d40bf5f8405). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1913.

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