Systems Approach To The Design Of Non-Ferrous Metallurgical Plants

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
John G. Whellock
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
16
File Size:
1021 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1985

Abstract

Over the last decade new constraints have emerged in the metallurgical industry which challenge the very basis of design and construction of smelters and refineries. The hackneyed designs of the past will not now serve the revised objectives of: - minimal cost of ownership - improved productivity - reduced energy consumption - greater flexibility in feed or product - minimized recycle loops and by-products - more stringent environmental control The impact of these constraints has been channeled constructively into process intensification - exemplified at the large scale by the introduction of flash smelting technology and at the smaller scale by the application of rotary process vessels and converters for augmented heat and mass transfer. The design of successful process plants depends on the understanding of the unit operations and their interactions which is the discipline of systems engineering. With the advent of increased process intensification the importance of a systems approach to process design and implementation becomes paramount. This paper describes the systems approach with specific reference to medium scale projects in the primary and secondary metallurgical industry.
Citation

APA: John G. Whellock  (1985)  Systems Approach To The Design Of Non-Ferrous Metallurgical Plants

MLA: John G. Whellock Systems Approach To The Design Of Non-Ferrous Metallurgical Plants. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1985.

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