Chattanooga Paper - The Behavior of Calcium Sulphate at Elevated Temperatures with Some Fluxes

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 26
- File Size:
- 1271 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1909
Abstract
The mineral gypsum, CaSO4 + 2 H2O, has been used for many years as a sulphurizing and basic flux in several smelting-operations. Thus, in smelting oxide nickel-ore in the blastfurnace, it is commonly added to the charge to furnish the sulphur necessary for collecting the metal in a matte, and a base for slagging the siliceous gangue. In the concentration of lead-copper matte in the reverberatory furnace it has been used for years at Preiberg, Saxony,1 for a similar purpose, and for producing at the same time a copper-matte with less than 0.15 per cent. of Fe. The latest use gypsum has been put to is in the blast-roasting process of Carmichael-Bradford.2 The term " blast-roasting," given by A. S. Dwight3 to the Dwight-Lloyd method of roasting and agglomerating: is a happy generic term which covers the ground better than the " lime-roasting " of Ingalls5 or the " pot-roasting " of Austin: in that it leaves the operation independent of the character of the flux and the form of apparatus, and retains the characteristic feature of this class of processes—namely, that of using forced draft. In the Carmichael-Bradford process the dehydrated material, mixed with galena-concentrate, acts as a diluent and a flux. The process differs in this from the Huntington-Heberlein7 and the Savelsberg8 processes, in both of which limestone is used.
Citation
APA:
(1909) Chattanooga Paper - The Behavior of Calcium Sulphate at Elevated Temperatures with Some FluxesMLA: Chattanooga Paper - The Behavior of Calcium Sulphate at Elevated Temperatures with Some Fluxes. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1909.