Papers - Nonferrous Metallurgy - Electrolytic Cadmium Plant of Anaconda Copper Mining Co. at Great Falls, Montana (With Discussion)

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 5
- File Size:
- 198 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1930
Abstract
The ore that is being treated by the present plant lies between the leached zone, or capping, and the mixed sulfide and oxide zone. The principal copper minerals are chalcanthite (CuS04.5H20), brochantite (CuSO4.3Cu (OH)2 and atacamite, (CuC12.3Cu (OH)2). There are, in addition, some other minerals such as cuprite and kröhnkite (CuS04. Na2S04.2H20). These minerals, with many others, occur in a greatly crushed granodiorite rock. most of the copper-bearing minerals occur in the cracks and veinlets, but there are disseminated values and it is probably the relative proportion of these that accounts for some otherwise unexplainable variations in extraction. The entire mineralization of the ore is complex and varies with depth. This variation, the problems presented thereby, and the effect of various constituents of the ore will be taken up in detail. An analysis of :in unweighted composite of the ore treated during 1927 follows: I'Lr Cent. Per Cent. Per Cent. Cu............... 1.58 S................. 2.10 Mo............ 0.01 SiO? ............. 66.10 HNO3 ........0.03 As............ 0.005 Fe.......... 1.41 C1 .............. 0.05 Sb............. 0.005 CnO ..... 0.20 Na................ 0.80 Ba............ 0.01 A1203 .......... 17.70 KI.............. 4.80 H20............ 0.70 mgO.............. 0.68 Mn............... 0.07 0 in sulfates. . . . 3.94 Total..... 100.19 The most important constituents of the ore, as indicated by experience to date, are: (1) The total copper content; (2) the acid-insoluble copper; (3) the acid-making copper mineral, mainly the chalcanthite; (4) the chlorine; (5) the nitrates; (6) the soluble iron; (7) the soluble molybdenum. The total copper content needs no discussion. In Table 1, the values are weighted averages calculated from individual charge analyses. The acid-insoluble copper directly affects the extraction, as the present leach recovers practically no acid-insoluble copper. In Table 1 the values are unweighted averages of the analyses of monthly composite samples. The acid-making copper mineral affects the amount of copper that can be dissolved from the ore without neutralizing acid in the solution. The
Citation
APA:
(1930) Papers - Nonferrous Metallurgy - Electrolytic Cadmium Plant of Anaconda Copper Mining Co. at Great Falls, Montana (With Discussion)MLA: Papers - Nonferrous Metallurgy - Electrolytic Cadmium Plant of Anaconda Copper Mining Co. at Great Falls, Montana (With Discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1930.