Chicago, Ill Paper - Russell's Improved Process for the Lixiviation of Silver-Ores

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
C. A. Stetefeldt
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
72
File Size:
3097 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1885

Abstract

FoR the convenience of those who do not care to enter into the details of this long essay, I begin with a summary of the most important results it presents. The extraction of silver by the lixiviation-process from ores which have been subjected to a chloridizing-roasting, is based upon the fact that silver chloride is easily soluble in solutions of sodium or calcium hyposulphite, and that silver is precipitated from such solutions by an alkaline sulphide, with regeneration of the hyposulphite salts. In case the ore contains lead a large portion of the latter is and dissolved, lead sulphate being soluble in hyposulphite solutions. If, at the same time, copper is present, the sulphides precipitated from the solution, contain silver, copper, and lead, a combination of metals not desirable for subsequent treatment. Mr. E. H. Russell, of Park City, Utah, is the inventor and the patentee in the United States and several foreign countries of a new lixiviation-process, based upon the chemical facts discussed in this paper. Mr. Russell has discovered that lead can be completely separated from a sodium hyposulphite solution, as lead carbonate, by sodium carbonate or purified soda-ash, without precipitating any copper or silver. After decanting the solution from the lead carbonate, silver and copper are obtained from it in the usual way. This method of separating lead prohibits the use of calcium poly-sulphide as a precipitant for the sulphides, because any calcium entering the regenerated lixiviationsolution would also be precipitated as a carbonate with the lead by soda-ash. Hence, a sodium sulphide must be employed. A full investigation has demonstrated that this is by no means detrimental. Sodium sulphide and hyposulphite are more advantageously used in the lixiviation-process than the corresponding calcium-salts. Another defect in the lixiviation-process consisted in the necessity of a very perfect chlorination of the silver in the ore, because silver in
Citation

APA: C. A. Stetefeldt  (1885)  Chicago, Ill Paper - Russell's Improved Process for the Lixiviation of Silver-Ores

MLA: C. A. Stetefeldt Chicago, Ill Paper - Russell's Improved Process for the Lixiviation of Silver-Ores. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1885.

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