Atlanta, Ga Paper - The Effect of Washing with Water Upon the Silver Chloride in Roasted Ore (see Discussion p. 1015)

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 8
- File Size:
- 302 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1896
Abstract
In my paper on "The Lixiviation of Silver-Ores by the Russell Process at Aspen, Colorado" (page 137 of the present volume), attention was called to the decrease in "chlorination " during the washing of the roasted ore with water, to remove soluble salts, before leaching with hyposulphite and Russell solutions. This decrease in " chlorination," which is due to conversion of the silver chloride to some other form not soluble in hyposulphite solutions, and which, for the sake of brevity, will be termed the "going-back" of chlorination, has been a serious obstacle to the successful operation of several leaching-works, and was at Aspen the only difficulty encountered. I have never seen any explanation of the cause of this failure to extract, in actual practice in the mill, the amount of silver chloride shown by laboratory-leachings to be present in the roasted ore; and the purpose of this paper is to record the conclusions arrived at concerning the cause of the phenomenon, and the data upon which they are based. The average decrease in chlorination by washing with water in the Aspen ores for a period of fourteen months was as follows:
Citation
APA:
(1896) Atlanta, Ga Paper - The Effect of Washing with Water Upon the Silver Chloride in Roasted Ore (see Discussion p. 1015)MLA: Atlanta, Ga Paper - The Effect of Washing with Water Upon the Silver Chloride in Roasted Ore (see Discussion p. 1015). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1896.