DC Arc Smelting Of Difficult PGM-Containing Feed Materials

The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
R. T. Jones I. J. Kotzé
Organization:
The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
4
File Size:
27 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2004

Abstract

Conventional PGM matte smelting requires the presence of a certain quantity of base metal sulphides in order to collect the platinum group metals in a molten sulphidic matte phase in the furnace. Furthermore, the quantity of chromium oxide in the feed materials is controlled in order to avoid the build-up of high-melting chromite spinels in the furnace. Mintek has developed a process for smelting difficult PGM-containing feed materials that contain low amounts of sulphur and/or high amounts of chromium oxide. A DC arc furnace is used to provide the appropriate conditions to generate an iron alloy that collects PGMs very effectively, leaving extremely low residual quantities of PGMs in the slag. Various feed materials have been treated successfully in furnace campaigns running at power levels up to 1.5 MW. The longest of these campaigns was run continuously for more than four months, treating more than two thousand tons of materials such as low-grade concentrates, revert tailings, and converter slag. The campaigns demonstrated the robustness and versatility of the process, and proved that it is possible to sustainably produce a PGM-containing alloy and discardable slags containing an average of less than 1.4 g/t of PGMs over the entire campaign. Keywords: DC arc, smelting, furnace, platinum, PGM, revert tailings, converter slag, ConRoast
Citation

APA: R. T. Jones I. J. Kotzé  (2004)  DC Arc Smelting Of Difficult PGM-Containing Feed Materials

MLA: R. T. Jones I. J. Kotzé DC Arc Smelting Of Difficult PGM-Containing Feed Materials. The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2004.

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