RI 2247 Chloride Volatilization Process

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Thomas Varley C. C. Stevenson
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
9
File Size:
686 KB
Publication Date:
May 1, 1921

Abstract

"The art of treating ores by the chloride volatilization process is still in the experimental stage. The process has not been sufficiently developed along chemical and metallurgical lines to state definitely just what place it will occupy in the metallurgical industry. The theory upon which the process operates has received the attention of prominent metallurgists for the past twenty years, and research and experimental work has been conducted by many investigators.Much of the experimental work done has never been published, and it seems that the accumulation of such results if made known would be an important aid to the further development of the process. The object of this paper is, therefore, to bring salient features of the process to the attention of the metallurgical industry, both for the purpose of furnishing information, and receiving from interested parties any comments which the reading of this article may suggest. A bulletin covering the work done at the Intermountain experiment station of the U. S. Bureau of Mines, situated at Salt Lake City, Utah, is in course of preparation.The chloridizing roast is usually accompanied by appreciable losses due, to the volatilization of the metals as chlorides during the roast, these losses often running as high as 30 per cent, depending upon the temperature, the character of the ores and the associated gangue material. It was not until 1891 that Croasdale, (Croasdale, Stuart, Engineering and Mining Journal, Aug. 29 1903) by observing this and stack deposits from the chloridizing roast, recognized the possibility of making volatilization a major instead of a minor feature of the roast. He then made tests on a large number of tires from different, localities, the result of which showed the, general application of the process. The main difficulty, as stated, by Croasdale, was the lack of a suitable means for recovering the fume from the furnace gasesIn 1913, Cottrell (See Mining and Scientific Press, March 29, 1913; alsoTrans. American Institute of Mining Engineering, September 1918. (Additional informa-tion is available from the owners, The Research Corporation of New lark, and Western Precipitation Co., .Los Angeles, Calif.), announced his invention of the electrostatic precipitator, which solved the problem of separating the solids from the furnace gases."
Citation

APA: Thomas Varley C. C. Stevenson  (1921)  RI 2247 Chloride Volatilization Process

MLA: Thomas Varley C. C. Stevenson RI 2247 Chloride Volatilization Process. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1921.

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