Production Of Ferric Sulfate And Sulfuric Acid From Roaster Gas

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
G. L. Oldright
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
15
File Size:
1078 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 8, 1925

Abstract

THE economic manufacture of sulfuric acid by the ordinary chamber process usually involves production on a large scale and a plant that is costly to construct. The nature of sulfuric acid makes it costly to transport any great distance. For these reasons, the metallurgist has not found it feasible, at times, to beneficiate ores amenable to leaching, and a. need exists for a local process that will produce acid cheaply on a small or large scale. To leach ores containing residual sulfides, an oxidizer, such as ferric sulfate, is needed in solution. Precipitation with scrap iron is one of the cheapest methods of removing some metals from solution, giving a plant of low first cost and supplying a source of cheap ferrous sulfate. The other ingredient needed for the process is SO2 roaster gas; the addition of which, as, described below, will give both ferric sulfate and sulfuric acid. Where roaster gas is a waste or obnoxious, product, the expense. for materials is still further lessened. The use of ferric sulfate and sulfuric acid as a solvent lends itself, well to the utilization of scrap iron as a precipitant, and the stages of the process fit in well together as an economic whole.
Citation

APA: G. L. Oldright  (1925)  Production Of Ferric Sulfate And Sulfuric Acid From Roaster Gas

MLA: G. L. Oldright Production Of Ferric Sulfate And Sulfuric Acid From Roaster Gas. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1925.

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