Copper-Arsenic Separation with the Aid of Low-Melting Salts

The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
A. Block-Bolten
Organization:
The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Pages:
9
File Size:
357 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1981

Abstract

Copper concentrates from northern Peru contain large amounts of arsenic and antimony in the form of sulfosalts like enargite, tennantite and tetrahedrite. These impurities affect up to 30% of Peruvian copper production. Under the sponsorship of the Instituto Geologico Minero y Metalurgico in Lima a project to separate copper from arsenic without pollution of the environment is being carried out at the National University of Trujillo in Peru. The U.N.T. process is unique in the respect of using .low melting salts as solvents, and sulfides of metals with high cation potential as destructors of the complex sulfosalt molecules. Laboratory scale experiments have given encouraging results but interesting and difficult problems developed on scale-up. The process is pyro-hydrometal-lurgical and under certain circumstances its economics are promising.
Citation

APA: A. Block-Bolten  (1981)  Copper-Arsenic Separation with the Aid of Low-Melting Salts

MLA: A. Block-Bolten Copper-Arsenic Separation with the Aid of Low-Melting Salts. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 1981.

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