Removal And Recovery Of Mercury From Gold, Silver, And Copper By-products

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 4
- File Size:
- 968 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1997
Abstract
Mercury contamination is a worldwide problem in the mining, smelting, and refining of gold, silver, and copper. In these areas, mercury may be found as a naturally-occurring material in ores and concentrates, and/or in secondary feedstocks such as leach residues, pyrometallurgical treatment residues, refinery byproducts, electrowinning electrodes, autoclave discharge solids, and waste water and acid plant sludges.
The United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has designated mercury one of the most harmful heavy metal contaminant in the environment and has implemented regulations that prohibit land disposal of characteristically hazardous wastes containing greater than 0.20 mg/1 TCLP mercury without prior treatment, thus increasing the cost of managing these materials.
The presence of mercury in mine, smelter, and refinery byproducts and wastes severely decreases, and in some cases eliminates, the ability to recover residual metal values from the contaminated material. The lost revenue associated with this disposal, combined with the increased direct cost of waste treatment, and/or disposal and protecting workers and the environment, can adversely affect overall profitability.
The safe, efficient, and economical removal of mercury from gold, silver, and copper mining by-products requires a treatment process that is capable of liberating the mercury from the wide variety of compounds and matrices in which it may be contained, reducing the mercury content in the matrix to desired levels, and recovering the mercury in pure saleable form, without producing any secondary solid, liquid, or gaseous wastes.
This paper reviews results from commercial operations and pilot scale tests using a thermal process owned and operated by Mercury Recovery Services, Inc. (MRS) to remove and recover mercury from copper acid plant blowdown sludge, MerrillCrowe precipitate from gold/silver mining operations, and Cottrell and salt slag dusts from a precious metals refinery.
Citation
APA:
(1997) Removal And Recovery Of Mercury From Gold, Silver, And Copper By-productsMLA: Removal And Recovery Of Mercury From Gold, Silver, And Copper By-products . Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1997.