The Mechanism Of Collection Of Metals And Metallic Sulphides By Amines And Amine Salts

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Nathaniel Arbiter Herbert H. Kellogg Arthur F. Taggart
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
10
File Size:
459 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1943

Abstract

THE experimental work herein described is presented in support of the following broad hypothesis: Conditioning of metals and metallic sulphides by amine collectors involves metathetic reaction at the solid surface between the collector and an oxidized metallic compound, to produce a coating comprising an amine-bearing compound of low solubility in the system. The type of reaction is different in acid and in basic solutions; both types may occur simultaneously in near-neutral pulps. EXPERIMENTAL The experiments comprise contact-angle tests with a variety of metals and metallic sulphides and extraction tests on ground chalcocite. Contact-angle tests were made principally on metals. Covellite paralleled metallic copper in amine solution at pH 8.8 (Table 3) and in alkaline water, but maintained an angle of about 70° in 10-3 HCl solution, where metallic copper lost its angle. The tests with anionic collectors (Table I) indicate that the behavior of metals in general is parallel to that of their minerals in anionic solutions. It is believed that this is generally true with cationic collectors also, but the covellite test is a warning against a broad assumption to this effect. All test specimens were mounted in Transoptic.* All tests in conditioning solution were preceded by a test in distilled water; cleaning and polishing were continued in every case until the angle in water was zero. Subsequent transfers into and out of solutions and test cells were made in such a way as to prevent exposure of the surface to air.1 The amine used was primary laurylamine, Armour and Co., AM-1120. It was used in the form of the hydrochloride, obtained by precipitation with gaseous hydrochloric acid from an ether solution of the amine, and purified by two recrystallizations from ether-alcohol.2 Inorganic and other test reagents were standard laboratory grades. [ ] Temperatures were not controlled; the probable range of test-solution temperatures is 65° t0 80°F.
Citation

APA: Nathaniel Arbiter Herbert H. Kellogg Arthur F. Taggart  (1943)  The Mechanism Of Collection Of Metals And Metallic Sulphides By Amines And Amine Salts

MLA: Nathaniel Arbiter Herbert H. Kellogg Arthur F. Taggart The Mechanism Of Collection Of Metals And Metallic Sulphides By Amines And Amine Salts. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1943.

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