Teniente Converter- A Decade of Achievements at the Southern Peru Ilo Smelter

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
L. Mariscal Samaniego E. Herrera Alarcón
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
12
File Size:
803 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2007

Abstract

The Teniente Converter (wet charge type) was commissioned in august 1995 and was designed to smelt 744 tpd (metric tons per day) of dry copper concentrates. Its products are white metal (73% Cu) that is sent to the Peirce Smith converters, slag that is cleaned in Reverberatory Furnaces and the process gases that are sent to the Sulfuric Acid Plant. Since its start up, the Teniente Converter smelting capacity was increased 1.6 times, from 800 tpd to 1,280 tpd using 33% oxygen-enriched air, and reaching an operative availability of 97%. By the other hand its campaigns have reached a record duration of 530 days without hot patching tuyeres and a partial refractory lining repair in the last four campaigns. This paper describes the most relevant improvements, as well as the strategies that had been used to reach these achievements.
Citation

APA: L. Mariscal Samaniego E. Herrera Alarcón  (2007)  Teniente Converter- A Decade of Achievements at the Southern Peru Ilo Smelter

MLA: L. Mariscal Samaniego E. Herrera Alarcón Teniente Converter- A Decade of Achievements at the Southern Peru Ilo Smelter. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2007.

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