Copper Extraction From Smelter Flue Dust By Lime-Roast/Ammoniacal Heap Leaching (College of Mines and Earth Resources University of Idaho)

- Organization:
- The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
- Pages:
- 13
- File Size:
- 545 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1992
Abstract
Copper smelter flue dusts often cannot be directly recycled to the smelting process and accumulate as hazardous wastes requiring environmentally acceptable disposal. Because of the limited amount of flue dust, a separate copper extraction process must be simple and require-a small plant investment. A flue dust process has been developed, consisting of the following steps: (1) roasting a pelletized mixture of hydrated lime and flue dust to fix arsenic and sulfur as insoluble calcium salts, (2) heap leaching the roasted pellets with a buffered ammonia/ammonium salt solution to extract copper as an ammine complex in a lined cell that is the final repository of the leached pellets, and (3) boiling ammonia from the lixiviant to precipitate copper. Condensed ammonia and the filtered solution are returned to leaching. Heap leaching in the final repository cell lowers the capital investment significantly compared with competing extraction processes. Chemistry with respect to arsenic, sulfur and copper is discussed.
Citation
APA:
(1992) Copper Extraction From Smelter Flue Dust By Lime-Roast/Ammoniacal Heap Leaching (College of Mines and Earth Resources University of Idaho)MLA: Copper Extraction From Smelter Flue Dust By Lime-Roast/Ammoniacal Heap Leaching (College of Mines and Earth Resources University of Idaho). The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 1992.