Copper Recovery Via Oxychloride Routes

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
D. C. McLean
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
22
File Size:
614 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1979

Abstract

One of the few innovations in hydrometallurgy in recent years has been the utilization of the chemistry of basic iron sulfates called jarosites. These have been used to make iron-zinc separations in the processing of zinc concentrates and are a very important factor in both the Duval and Cymet copper chloride processes as a means of preventing iron build-up in the closed leaching circuits. Copper oxychlorides are kindred compounds in that they are insoluble basic salts that form at low pH (1.5 to 3) and precipitate selectively from many base metal solutions. They have been reported in the chemical literature as far back as 1860, and a few of them are known in their mineralogical forms (particularly atacamite) usually as nuisance minerals because of their chloride content. Several patents describe their synthesis and use as fungicides and insecticides, and papers have discussed their formation as corrosion pro¬ducts on copper and brass piping (14).
Citation

APA: D. C. McLean  (1979)  Copper Recovery Via Oxychloride Routes

MLA: D. C. McLean Copper Recovery Via Oxychloride Routes. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1979.

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