Recovery Of Molybdenite At Toquepala

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
J. F. Shirley M. L. Campbell L. C. De Jong
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
7
File Size:
302 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 9, 1967

Abstract

The Toquepala concentrator of the Southern Peru Copper Corp., located approximately 720 miles southeast of Lima near the Chilean border, processes 36,500 tons of ore daily containing between 0.50% and 3.00% copper. The molybdenite content in the ore also varies greatly, ranging from essentially nothing to as high as 0.15%. The 1966 yearly averages were approximately 1.20% copper and 0.03 % molybdenite. The three basic problems that plague the opera- tion of any molybdenite recovery plant are all present at Toquepala in large measures. Both the quantity of plant feed and the quantity of molybdenite contained in the plant feed are continuously changing. Even more detrimental to an efficient operation is the fact that the copper mineralization in the feed frequently changes once in every 24 hours and occasionally once a shift. From the point of view of the molybdenite plant metallurgist, there are four distinctive chalcopyrite concentrates and, at least, an equal number of chalcocite concentrates treated in the molybdenite recovery circuit. The various types of concentrates are distinguished mainly by their mineral content and how effectively the copper minerals are depressed by the different reagents used in the circuit.
Citation

APA: J. F. Shirley M. L. Campbell L. C. De Jong  (1967)  Recovery Of Molybdenite At Toquepala

MLA: J. F. Shirley M. L. Campbell L. C. De Jong Recovery Of Molybdenite At Toquepala. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1967.

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