Characterization of Tin-rich Copper Anodes from Secondary Copper Refineries

The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
T. T. Chen
Organization:
The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Pages:
10
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5540 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2010

Abstract

Copper anodes generated from copper scrap are relatively rich in Sn, Zn and Fe. Because of the presence of oxygen, only trace amounts of Sn occur in solid solution in the copper crystals. Thus, Sn occurs mainly as SnO2, Cu-Sn-Ni oxide and Sn-Ni-Zn oxide in the copper anodes, and Zn and Fe occur mainly as minor constituents in the Sn-Ni-Zn oxide and Cu-Sn-Ni oxide. During electrorefining, these oxide species are liberated from the copper anodes and report directly to the anode slimes. The trace amounts of Sn present in solid solution in the copper crystals dissolve but reprecipitate as Sn arsenate or a Sb-As-Sn-O phase. Accordingly, high Sn contents in copper anodes do not lead to elevated Sn concentrations in the electrolyte.
Citation

APA: T. T. Chen  (2010)  Characterization of Tin-rich Copper Anodes from Secondary Copper Refineries

MLA: T. T. Chen Characterization of Tin-rich Copper Anodes from Secondary Copper Refineries. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 2010.

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