Slag Fuming Process At The Cominco Smelter, Trail, British Columbia

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
George A. Yurko
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
18
File Size:
921 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1970

Abstract

The Cominco smelter, located at Trail, British Columbia, Canada, produces 180 000 metric tons of lead bullion annually in conventional blast furnaces. The resulting slag from these furnaces, 210 000 metric tons annually, containing 18 per cent zinc and 2.5 per cent lead, is treated directly in the slag fuming plant for the recovery of these metals and other valuable metals present in smaller quantities. Slag fuming is carried out on a 55 metric ton batch process in completely water-jacketed furnaces where the slag is blown with a mixture of powdered coal and air. The coal-to-air ratio is con- trolled to maintain strongly reducing conditions, thus, fuming the metals from the slag. The metal vapours are subsequently re-oxidized with air above the bath. The mixture of oxides is carried from the furnace by the gases through waste heat boilers and cooling flues to a baghouse where they are collected. The slag fuming plant, under normal conditions, will treat 700 metric tons of slag daily. The throughput in the plant is dependent on the fuming rate of zinc, which is a function of the composition of the slag, and on the economics, which dictate the extent to which zinc is fumed from the slag. Zinc and lead collected daily as fume average 113 metric tons and 17 metric tons, respectively, corresponding to recoveries of 89 per cent zinc and 98 per cent lead from the slag. The waste heat boilers produce 61 metric tons steam per hour, which is distributed to other processing plants.
Citation

APA: George A. Yurko  (1970)  Slag Fuming Process At The Cominco Smelter, Trail, British Columbia

MLA: George A. Yurko Slag Fuming Process At The Cominco Smelter, Trail, British Columbia. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1970.

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