New York Paper - Electrolytic Zinc from Complex Ores (with Discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
U. C. Tainton L. T. Leyson
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
43
File Size:
2660 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1924

Abstract

Some time ago, at ameeting of the Institute Prof. J. W. Richards1 said, "I take exception to the statement that all the factors in the production of electrolytic zinc were known long ago.... There is possible in my opinion an improvement of perhaps 50 per cent. in the new electrolytic processes." An examination of the literature of the subject will show the justness of Professor Richards' contention. The work of the earlier investigators was carried on in the shadow of difficulties that, today, are hardly more than memories. We seldom hear now of zinc sponge, that bête noir of the electrolytic-zinc pioneers. Zinc sponge was the name given to a peculiar, soft, black, non-adherent form of zinc deposit that was utterly useless for melting into ingot form. At the big plant at Cockle Creek, New South Wales, in 1897, Edgar Ashcroft2 said that the solution in the plant would suddenly, and without ascertainable cause, go' "bad" and begin to deposit spongy zinc. The most delicate, even spectroscopic, methods of analysis were unable to detect any difference between "good" solution and "bad" solution; either form might change to the other on being kept for a while. When it is added that an outbreak of this insidious disease (which appeared to be infectious, or at least contagious) could be dealt with only by discarding the solution and washing out all tanks and pipe lines, some idea may be gathered of the troubles of the zinc electrometallurgist in what may be spoken of as the "sponge age" of electrolytic zinc. Thanks to the efforts of a number of investigators, we are today able to diagnose with considerable certitude the nature of the malady that puzzled Ashcroft and his co-workers. The researches of Mylius and
Citation

APA: U. C. Tainton L. T. Leyson  (1924)  New York Paper - Electrolytic Zinc from Complex Ores (with Discussion)

MLA: U. C. Tainton L. T. Leyson New York Paper - Electrolytic Zinc from Complex Ores (with Discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1924.

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