New York Paper - The Refining of the Precipitates Obtained by Means of Zinc in the Cyanide Process of Gold and Silver Extraction

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 27
- File Size:
- 977 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1904
Abstract
PAGE Introduction,............891 L Nature of Precipitates,.........892 11. Experimental Work Upon Alloys,......895 Silver,............895 Gold,............896 Conclusions,............896 111. Present Methods of Refining,.......897 1. Refining by Roasting,.........897 2 Refining with Acid,..........898 3. Smelting with Lead,.........902 Tavener's Method,..........903 Merrill a Method,.,........903 Comparison of Costs of Acid-Refining and Smelting Processes,. . 904 Detailed Costs of Refining Cyanide Precipitates at Lead, So. Dak., September 29, 1903,.........904 Cost of Acid-Refining at the Horseshoe Mill, Terry, So. Dak.,. . 907 IV. The Removal of Zinc by Distillation,.....908 Experimental Distillations,.....,...910 Analysis of Precipitates Used for Distillation-Experiments,. . 910 Discussion of the Results of the Distillation-Experiments,. . 915 V. General Conclusions,.........917 VI. Outline of a Proposed MEthod OF Treatment,.... 917 Introduction. Attempts to discover, for the cyanide process, a better precipitant than zinc have been unsuccessful. Hydrogen sulphide, sulphurous acid, ferrous sulphate, etc., precipitate gold and silver from cyanide solutions either not all or incompletely.
Citation
APA:
(1904) New York Paper - The Refining of the Precipitates Obtained by Means of Zinc in the Cyanide Process of Gold and Silver ExtractionMLA: New York Paper - The Refining of the Precipitates Obtained by Means of Zinc in the Cyanide Process of Gold and Silver Extraction. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1904.