Conversion Plant at Langeloth, Pa. - Modern Efficient Facilities Make a Variety of Products for Industry

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 3
- File Size:
- 552 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1946
Abstract
A LARGE part of the molybdenum produced in Colorado is converted and consumed in the Eastern States. As the raw materials and the power needed for the conversion of the Colorado concentrate are also accessible in the Eastern States, the conversion plant has been installed some 1500 miles east of where the ore is mined and milled. When concentrate was first produced at Climax in 1918, a custom smelter converted the product into ferromolybdenum. By 1924, the Company had decided to produce calcium molybdate and rented a building and installed equipment for that purpose at Langeloth, near Burgettstown, Pa., about thirty miles west of Pittsburgh. For the first few years the plant was a simple one of small capacity. A small hand-rabbled roaster was used, the product of which was made iota calcium molybdate by a conventional method; then an eight hearth mechanically rabbled roaster was installed to increase and speed up production. The output was considerably less than a million pounds of contained molybdenum annually until 1928, when a small part of the produc-
Citation
APA:
(1946) Conversion Plant at Langeloth, Pa. - Modern Efficient Facilities Make a Variety of Products for IndustryMLA: Conversion Plant at Langeloth, Pa. - Modern Efficient Facilities Make a Variety of Products for Industry. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1946.