The Production of Nickel: Extractive Metallurgy -Past, Present and Future

The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
C. S. Simons
Organization:
The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Pages:
44
File Size:
1483 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1988

Abstract

This paper presents a review of the extractive processes used in the production of nickel, with emphasis on developments since the beginning of the Second World War. Attention is given to the factors, many outside the nickel industry itself, which determined the direction of process research and strongly influenced the ultimate commitments to industrialize the resulting developments. An example of such a factor is the sudden surge in demand, far exceeding the then available nickel production capacity, that was caused by the advent of World War II; the result was the first serious consideration ever given to low- grade laterites as a viable source of primary nickel. Other factors discussed include such items as process development in the extraction of other metals - particularly copper; the availability of increasingly sophisticated materials of const- ruction; the advent of the "environmentalist" and related political developments; the massive escalation in the price of energy - particularly oil. The paper concludes with an attempt to forecast the nature of the most effective nickel process of the future, based on extrapolation from the economic and political situation that exists today.
Citation

APA: C. S. Simons  (1988)  The Production of Nickel: Extractive Metallurgy -Past, Present and Future

MLA: C. S. Simons The Production of Nickel: Extractive Metallurgy -Past, Present and Future. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 1988.

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