RI 3746 Precipitation of Copper from an Acid Mine Water

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
F. S. Wartman A. H. Roberson
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
30
File Size:
37388 KB
Publication Date:
Feb 1, 1944

Abstract

For many years , it has been the common practice at most copper mines to recover copper in solution in effluent mine water by precipitating the copper with scrap iron.4/ The technique employed varies from simply throwing scrap iron or tin cans into the waste ditches to passing the water through elaborate launder systems containing detinned scrap and baled cans . In general , a considerable amount of low - cost copper has been recovered that otherwise would have been lost . Iron consumption usually varies from 1 to 1-1/2 pounds of iron for each pound of copper recovered . The grade of the precipitate may be as much as 90 percent copper.4/ ,5/ Where the consumption of iron is materially greater , its cost is likely to be the determining factor of profit . In times of emergency, when the demand for scrap iron for remelting increases the cost of the iron sharply, and the supply of tin cans is not large enough to meet requirements , recovery of the copper might not be economical . The three principal reactions that take place when an acid mine water containing iron and copper salts in solution is brought into contact with metallic iron are : (1 ) Copper is precipitated and an equivalent amount of iron is dissolved , CuSO4 + Fe Cu + FeSO4 ; ( 2) ferric salts are reduced to ferrous salts , Fe2 (SO4 ) 3 + Fe = 3FeSO4 ; and (3) the free acid in the solution reacts. with metallic iron to produce ferrous sulfate , H2SO4 + Fe = H2 + FeSO4 . = Because of the reported high.consumption of iron (5 to 6 pounds per pound of copper precipitated ), when copper in water from the Hornet mine of the Mountain Copper Co. ( California ) was precipitated upon scrap iron , a series of tests was made to determine . the . optimum treatment, time , and consumption of iron .
Citation

APA: F. S. Wartman A. H. Roberson  (1944)  RI 3746 Precipitation of Copper from an Acid Mine Water

MLA: F. S. Wartman A. H. Roberson RI 3746 Precipitation of Copper from an Acid Mine Water. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1944.

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