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Oxidation Sulfuric Acid Autoclave Leaching of Copper Smelting Production Fine Dust. / Karimov, K. A.; Naboichenko, S. S.; Kritskii, A. V. et al.
In: Metallurgist, Vol. 62, No. 11-12, 15.03.2019, p. 1244-1249.

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@article{9d0fa23abe004fb28d45a3ab02e1faed,
title = "Oxidation Sulfuric Acid Autoclave Leaching of Copper Smelting Production Fine Dust",
abstract = "Lead, zinc, and arsenic are associated elements in copper ores. Due to deterioration of concentrate quality and involvement in recycling of secondary raw materials, these impurities are increasingly circulated in copper-smelting production, most often collected in fine dusts. Recovery of these dusts for pyrometallurgical processing leads to contamination of black copper with arsenic and lead. Results are provided for sulfuric acid autoclave leaching of OAO SUMZ dust and dust obtained after recovery melting, containing alongside copper and zinc considerable amounts of lead and arsenic. The effect of temperature and acid concentration on autoclave leaching indices is studied. Optimum dust leaching parameters are obtained: temperature 160°C, H2SO4/(Pb+Zn+Cu)=2.1, PO2=0.3MPa, τ=2h, and with these parameters the maximum degree of leaching for arsenic, copper and zinc is observed. Direct oxidizing sulfuric autoclave leaching of fine dust makes it possible to extract up to 89% copper and 92% zinc. Arsenic passes into a cake in the form of iron arsenate, which complicates subsequent processing. In order to exclude deposition of arsenic during autoclave leaching it is necessary to remove arsenic from dust where it is present in the form of oxidized compounds, and therefore it is possible to use atmospheric sulfuric acid leaching for its extraction. During two stages of atmospheric and autoclave oxidation leaching, it is possible to extract up to 93% Cu, 96% Zn, and 99% As.",
keywords = "arsenic, autoclave leaching, copper, extraction, fine dust, technogenic raw material, zinc",
author = "Karimov, {K. A.} and Naboichenko, {S. S.} and Kritskii, {A. V.} and Kovyazin, {A. A.} and Tret{\textquoteright}yak, {M. A.}",
year = "2019",
month = mar,
day = "15",
doi = "10.1007/s11015-019-00781-3",
language = "English",
volume = "62",
pages = "1244--1249",
journal = "Metallurgist",
issn = "0026-0894",
publisher = "Springer Nature",
number = "11-12",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Oxidation Sulfuric Acid Autoclave Leaching of Copper Smelting Production Fine Dust

AU - Karimov, K. A.

AU - Naboichenko, S. S.

AU - Kritskii, A. V.

AU - Kovyazin, A. A.

AU - Tret’yak, M. A.

PY - 2019/3/15

Y1 - 2019/3/15

N2 - Lead, zinc, and arsenic are associated elements in copper ores. Due to deterioration of concentrate quality and involvement in recycling of secondary raw materials, these impurities are increasingly circulated in copper-smelting production, most often collected in fine dusts. Recovery of these dusts for pyrometallurgical processing leads to contamination of black copper with arsenic and lead. Results are provided for sulfuric acid autoclave leaching of OAO SUMZ dust and dust obtained after recovery melting, containing alongside copper and zinc considerable amounts of lead and arsenic. The effect of temperature and acid concentration on autoclave leaching indices is studied. Optimum dust leaching parameters are obtained: temperature 160°C, H2SO4/(Pb+Zn+Cu)=2.1, PO2=0.3MPa, τ=2h, and with these parameters the maximum degree of leaching for arsenic, copper and zinc is observed. Direct oxidizing sulfuric autoclave leaching of fine dust makes it possible to extract up to 89% copper and 92% zinc. Arsenic passes into a cake in the form of iron arsenate, which complicates subsequent processing. In order to exclude deposition of arsenic during autoclave leaching it is necessary to remove arsenic from dust where it is present in the form of oxidized compounds, and therefore it is possible to use atmospheric sulfuric acid leaching for its extraction. During two stages of atmospheric and autoclave oxidation leaching, it is possible to extract up to 93% Cu, 96% Zn, and 99% As.

AB - Lead, zinc, and arsenic are associated elements in copper ores. Due to deterioration of concentrate quality and involvement in recycling of secondary raw materials, these impurities are increasingly circulated in copper-smelting production, most often collected in fine dusts. Recovery of these dusts for pyrometallurgical processing leads to contamination of black copper with arsenic and lead. Results are provided for sulfuric acid autoclave leaching of OAO SUMZ dust and dust obtained after recovery melting, containing alongside copper and zinc considerable amounts of lead and arsenic. The effect of temperature and acid concentration on autoclave leaching indices is studied. Optimum dust leaching parameters are obtained: temperature 160°C, H2SO4/(Pb+Zn+Cu)=2.1, PO2=0.3MPa, τ=2h, and with these parameters the maximum degree of leaching for arsenic, copper and zinc is observed. Direct oxidizing sulfuric autoclave leaching of fine dust makes it possible to extract up to 89% copper and 92% zinc. Arsenic passes into a cake in the form of iron arsenate, which complicates subsequent processing. In order to exclude deposition of arsenic during autoclave leaching it is necessary to remove arsenic from dust where it is present in the form of oxidized compounds, and therefore it is possible to use atmospheric sulfuric acid leaching for its extraction. During two stages of atmospheric and autoclave oxidation leaching, it is possible to extract up to 93% Cu, 96% Zn, and 99% As.

KW - arsenic

KW - autoclave leaching

KW - copper

KW - extraction

KW - fine dust

KW - technogenic raw material

KW - zinc

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85062946741&partnerID=8YFLogxK

UR - https://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi? GWVersion=2&SrcAuth=tsmetrics&SrcApp=tsm_test&DestApp=WOS_CPL&DestLinkType=FullRecord&KeyUT=000466040000021

U2 - 10.1007/s11015-019-00781-3

DO - 10.1007/s11015-019-00781-3

M3 - Article

AN - SCOPUS:85062946741

VL - 62

SP - 1244

EP - 1249

JO - Metallurgist

JF - Metallurgist

SN - 0026-0894

IS - 11-12

ER -

ID: 9815196