Cobalt from Slag- Lessons in Transition from Laboratory to Industry

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Arthur Robert Barnes Rodney Trevor Jones
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
15
File Size:
850 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2011

Abstract

Anglovaal Minerals acquired the Nkana slag dump from Zambia Consolidated Copper mines (ZCCM) in 1998 and embarked on an ambitious project to pioneer the recovery of cobalt from slag using DC smelting technology. Anglovaal Research Laboratories performed initial pioneering smelting tests in a 250 kW DC furnace over a 3-year period before engaging Mintek for three piloting campaigns at the 1.5 MW level. Mintek had previously developed a reductive smelting process, patented in 1995, using a DC arc furnace for the recovery of cobalt from slags. The results of the pilot-plant test campaigns were used as the basis for engineering the commercial 40 MW operation installed at Chambishi Metals plc in Zambia in 2001. This paper traces the development of understanding of the metallurgical fundamentals ultimately used to predict furnace performance, reviews some of the extreme technical challenges faced, how solutions were identified and highlights some of the critical issues identified during piloting and how these impacted both positively and negatively on the final commercial operation.
Citation

APA: Arthur Robert Barnes Rodney Trevor Jones  (2011)  Cobalt from Slag- Lessons in Transition from Laboratory to Industry

MLA: Arthur Robert Barnes Rodney Trevor Jones Cobalt from Slag- Lessons in Transition from Laboratory to Industry. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2011.

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