Queen Nine-Hearth Roaster

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
J. Moore Samuel
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
12
File Size:
517 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 7, 1921

Abstract

THE prospective change in ore receipts at the Copper Queen reduction works necessitated a careful study of conditions to determine the most economical method of smelting. The first step, calculating the known, probable, and possible results, showed the economy of a unimetallurgical flow sheet f which the three pyrometallurgical stages would be roasting, reverberatory smelting, and converting. The past and future ore receipts (not including converter flux) are as follows: AVERAGE MONTHLY FUTURE MONTHLY RECEIPTS, 1918 RECEIPTS TONS PER PER CENT. OF TONS PER PER CENT. OF MONTH TOTAL RECEIPTS MONTH TOTAL RECEIPTS Ore 84,553 82.3 43,000 44.0 Gravity concentrates 16,375 15.9 25,500 26.0 Flotation concentrates 1,883 1.8 29,400 30.0 Total 102,811 100.0 97,900 100.0 Of the 102,811 tons per month received in 1918, only 28,945, or 28 per cent., was treated in the roasters and an average f 14.1 roasters out of 20 were in operation; the remaining ore was treated in the blast furnaces. The change to "all reverb." practice, therefore, called for considerable additional roaster capacity, which could be obtained either by building additional units, or by remodelling the present units so as to give increased unit capacity. In view of the progress in roasting practice since the construction of the Copper Queen roaster plant and the heavy investment in that roaster plant, the second plan seemed to be the more desirable. The Copper Queen roaster plant consisted of twenty six-hearth, McDougall roasters, 18 ft. in diameter, equipped with cast-iron arms that originally were water cooled but now are air cooled. They have no top dry hearth and the feed is discharged through the top arch, near its periphery, by plunger feeders from two bins at opposite sides of the roaster.
Citation

APA: J. Moore Samuel  (1921)  Queen Nine-Hearth Roaster

MLA: J. Moore Samuel Queen Nine-Hearth Roaster. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1921.

Export
Purchase this Article for $25.00

Create a Guest account to purchase this file
- or -
Log in to your existing Guest account