Cominco Development in Lead Sintering Technique

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
R. Bainbridge
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
6
File Size:
3837 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1953

Abstract

"IntroductionTHE LEAD SMELTING Department of The Consolidated Mining •and Smelting Company of Canada, Limited (Cominco), at Trail, B.C. treats materials from numerous sources for the recovery of lead, •and, of secondary importance, for the .recovery of sulphur as S02• The Department's sintering section has a .capacity of 1,500 tons daily. This section is being replaced by •a new charge-•handling and sintering plant with a daily capacity of 2,000 tons of finished sinter. Materials handled in the sintering section comprise concentrates, ores, and fluxes from Company mines and from 'custom' (independent) producers, together with intermediate products from various plants of Cominco'•s Metallurgical Division, all of which must be treated to, make up a chemically balanced charge of a predetermined lead content for the sintering plant.As received, 80 •per .cent of these materials are finer than 200 mesh, and one-quarter of the tonnage (dry basis) is a slurry .at 30 to 40 per cent moisture. This slurry, a -residue from the electrolytic zinc operation, was, for many years, partially dried before being mixed with other dry materials to make up the sinterplant charge.Some experimental work carried out in 1937 indicated that the metallurgy of the sintering operation could be improved by adopting a technique of 'wet-mixing' followed by controlled drying and nodulizing."
Citation

APA: R. Bainbridge  (1953)  Cominco Development in Lead Sintering Technique

MLA: R. Bainbridge Cominco Development in Lead Sintering Technique. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1953.

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