RI 8697 Recovery of Iron and Copper From Copper Smelting Furnace Slags by Carbon Injection - With an Appendix on Evaluation of Granulated Iron as a Precipitant for Copper by W. J. Schlitt

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
J. I. Paige
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
23
File Size:
1329 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1982

Abstract

The Bureau of Mines, U.S. Department of the Interior, conducts research on methods to minimize the requirements for mineral raw materials through conservation, substitution, and increased minerals and metals recovery from primary and secondary domestic resources. To further this goal, prior Bureau research had devised a pyrometallurgical technique (RI 8211) to recover metallic iron and copper from molten copper smelting furnace slags by carbothermic reduction. As a continuation of this Bureau research on the carbon injection technique, reverberatory and electric furnace slags were treated in an 800-kva electric arc furnace by simultaneously top feeding the slag and injecting coke breeze into the bottom of the molten bath. Results of the tests show that 76 to 89 pct of the copper and up to 48 pct of the iron contained in the smelting furnace slag were recovered in a metallic phase, while 56 to 82 pct of the carbon injected into the sys-tem was utilized as the reductant. Laboratory evaluation has shown that the metal product, which contains 86.9 to 95.0 wt-pct iron and 1.3 to 4.1 wt-pct copper, will be a satisfactory medium for recovering copper by cementation. The expected energy consumption for the process is 110 kwhr per ton of molten slag treated and 520 kwhr per ton of solid material charged.
Citation

APA: J. I. Paige  (1982)  RI 8697 Recovery of Iron and Copper From Copper Smelting Furnace Slags by Carbon Injection - With an Appendix on Evaluation of Granulated Iron as a Precipitant for Copper by W. J. Schlitt

MLA: J. I. Paige RI 8697 Recovery of Iron and Copper From Copper Smelting Furnace Slags by Carbon Injection - With an Appendix on Evaluation of Granulated Iron as a Precipitant for Copper by W. J. Schlitt. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1982.

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