Novel Technology for Wastewater Treatment by Biologics in Hydrometallurgical Processes of Lead-zinc

- Organization:
- The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
- Pages:
- 7
- File Size:
- 1167 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2010
Abstract
Heavy metal-containing wastewater from hydrometallurgical processes of lead-zinc was treated by biologics in a 200 m3/h industrial scale experiment. The result shows that Zn concentration declined from 50.28 mg/L~240.81 mg/L to 0.21 mg/L~1.98 mg/L, Pb from 1.00 mg/L~13.47 mg/L to 0.083 mg/L~0.71 mg/L, Cu from 0.24 mg/L~2.38 mg/L to 0.059 mg/L~0.40 mg/L, Cd from 2.12 mg/L~23.47 mg/L to 0.011 mg/L~0.071 mg/L and As from 0.50 mg/L~6.00 mg/L to 0.005 mg/L~0.10 mg/L. The concentrations of the above heavy metals in the treated water were lower than that in Integrated Wastewater Discharge Standard (GB8978~1996) in China. Furthermore, the treated wastewater was recycled and reused in smelter plant. Zinc content in hydrolytic sludge reached up to 34.04%, which indicates that this sludge can be used to recover valuable metals.
Citation
APA:
(2010) Novel Technology for Wastewater Treatment by Biologics in Hydrometallurgical Processes of Lead-zincMLA: Novel Technology for Wastewater Treatment by Biologics in Hydrometallurgical Processes of Lead-zinc. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 2010.