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A study on electrowinning copper and zinc from low grade ores

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Title A study on electrowinning copper and zinc from low grade ores
Names Bennett, Marlin John (creator)
Meredith, Robert E. (advisor)
Date Issued 1962-09-28 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 1963
Abstract Large quantities of copper and zinc bearing ores exist in
Oregon. The metals are present as sulfides in small concentrations
so that it is difficult and uneconomical to mine them by the conventional
sulfuric acid electrowinning process.
A new process was developed to make mining of the copper and
zinc feasible. In ores of this type an ammonium hydroxide electrowinning
process has proved to be more economical and more efficient
than the sulfuric acid method.
The ore is first ground to approximately 100 mesh and then
roasted in air for a few hours at 1200°F. A solution of 15% ammonia
in water is then used to leach the copper and zinc from the ore. The
ammoniacal solution is selective for copper and zinc since these
metals form ammonia complex ions.
A countercurrent leaching procedure is recommended since a
91.5% recovery of total copper in 1.5 hours was accomplished in
bench scale experiments by this method of leaching.
The ammonium hydroxide leach liquor can be reused three
times before losing any of its ability to complex the metals. After
that time small amounts of concentrated ammonium hydroxide should
then be added to the leaching and plating cycle. Experiments showed
0.213 pounds ammonia used per pound of copper refined.
The copper is plated from the leach liquor at a current density
less than 5.5 amps/ft². By plating below this limit pure copper may
be deposited from the solution without plating zinc. After the copper
is removed pure zinc is plated at 20-30 amps/ft².
A current efficiency of 89.2% was obtained in plating the copper
with a power requirement of 1.285 kwhr/lb. Cu.
The developed process has many advantages over the sulfuric
acid electrowinning process now used in the majority of copper and
zinc refineries since both copper and zinc can be recovered in one
simple process with little extra cost.
Ores containing large amounts of iron are very detrimental to
the acid process and elaborate purification techniques are needed
before the acid process can be employed at all. Iron and lead cause
no difficulty in ammonia leaching since they have no tendency to
complex. The ammonia leach is much faster which in turn produces a
savings in wages and capital investment. An equal cost batch leach of
both ammonium hydroxide and sulfuric acid was conducted and the
ammonium hydroxide leach showed a 77.6% recovery of total copper
in a six hour period while the acid leach produced only a 55.1%
recovery.
The power cost for the ammonia process was 0.321 cents per
pound of copper which is slightly less than the 0.337 cents per pound
for the acid process.
This process should prove to be beneficial as a means of
extracting copper and zinc from predominately sulfide ores. The
advantages of the process over the sulfuric acid method are probably
enough to make the products competitive with the metals obtained by
acid refineries.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic Copper -- Electrometallurgy
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/48810

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