RI 5826 Copper Recovery From Segregation-Flotation Concentrates By Ammoniacal-Ammonium Carbonate Leaching ? Summary

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 10
- File Size:
- 2891 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1961
Abstract
Bench-scale laboratory tests were made by the Bureau of Mines of a segregation-flotation concentrate, assaying 20.43 percent copper, to investigate the influence of various ratios and concentrations of ammonia and carbon dioxide on copper extraction. Leaching the concentrate with a solution containing 900 pounds of ammonia and 360 pounds of carbon dioxide per ton of feed, followed by washing the leach residue with 1.75 tons of a 10-percent solution of ammonium carbonate and about 1 ton of water (as steam) per ton of solids, resulted in a copper recovery of 96.3 percent. Resegregation and flotation tests of the washed residues revealed that 85 percent of the copper in the residue could be recovered. Steam distillation tests of a typical ammoniacal leach liquor, assaying 39 grams copper, 105 grams ammonia, and 77 grams carbon dioxide per liter, recovered over 99 percent of the copper as a mixed oxide-carbonate precipitate. The ammonia losses in leaching, filtering, washing, and distillation were 0.12 pound per pound of copper recovered in the precipitate. Calcination and subsequent hydrogen reduction of the precipitate yielded a metallic copper powder assaying 98 percent Cu, 0.87 percent Si02, 0.10 percent MgO, 0.54 percent CaO, and 0.41 percent R203.
Citation
APA:
(1961) RI 5826 Copper Recovery From Segregation-Flotation Concentrates By Ammoniacal-Ammonium Carbonate Leaching ? SummaryMLA: RI 5826 Copper Recovery From Segregation-Flotation Concentrates By Ammoniacal-Ammonium Carbonate Leaching ? Summary. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1961.