RI 3068 Flotation Tests on Converter Slag

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 9
- File Size:
- 2831 KB
- Publication Date:
- Apr 1, 1931
Abstract
"The experimental flotation work described in this paper was undertaken to test the conclusions derived from a previous microscopic and chemical study of several samples of converter slag. That study3 resulted in the conclusion that approximately 90 per cent of the copper content of a converter slag wad in either the sulphide or metallic form, and that if the slag were cooled slowly the copper-bearing material would be in particles of such size that they would be freed from silicate and magnetite grains by grinding the slag to pass a 150-mesh sieve. If this were true, it should be possible to separate the copper-bearing grains from slowly cooled, converter slag by the flotation process.Many attempts, of which the author has seen no published account, have been made to treat slags, especially converter slags, by flotation. In every case these trials have been made with chilled slags, in which, as shown in the preceding report, the copper-bearing material is top finely disseminated, to be freed by any reasonable degree of grinding.The flotation tests described in this paper have shown that it is possible to recover by flotation about 30 per cent of the copper content of a converter slag containing 3 per cent copper and to obtain flotation concentrates which have a copper content of 35 per cent.Acknowledgment is made to G. L. Oldright, supervising engineer of the section of nonferrous metallurgy, U. S. Bureau of Mines, for valuable assistance and direction; to W. A. Sloan for chemical analyses; and to Alfred P. Towne for assistance in experimental manipulation."
Citation
APA:
(1931) RI 3068 Flotation Tests on Converter SlagMLA: RI 3068 Flotation Tests on Converter Slag. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1931.