Development of a Process for the Treatment of Electric Arc Furnace Dust and Other Urban Mining Wastes

- Organization:
- Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
- Pages:
- 13
- File Size:
- 1942 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2014
Abstract
"Urban Mining is a term that is increasingly being used, and represents an appreciable source of secondary materials for the metals extraction industry, a source that does not incur mining costs, but does, at present, incur considerable disposal costs. Electric Arc Furnace Dust (EAFD) is probably the most common of these materials, with an estimated global production of 8 million tonnes annually, of which 1 million tonnes is generated in North America. The contained annual metal value in EAFD at current prices is of the order of $6 billion, yet, apart from the zinc, virtually none of this is recovered.Despite many attempts over the years, with pyrometallurgical, hydrometallurgical or hybrid processes, currently the only commercially viable method of treating these materials is smelting in a Waelz Kiln (or a Rotary Hearth Furnace), which essentially recovers only the zinc, in an impure oxide form, and generates a secondary slag waste, which is still toxic and requires disposal. This paper describes the development of a chloride-based treatment process to recover all components of the EAFD in a marketable form, which centres around the novel hydrochloric acid recovery and recycle operation. Laboratory, miniplant and pilot plant data are presented, leading to the definition of a viable process flowsheet enabling the recovery of pure iron and zinc products (the principal components of EAFD), together with secondary products such as copper, silver, lead, cadmium, magnesium and manganese. A rigorous mass-energy balance is used to examine the preliminary economics involved."
Citation
APA:
(2014) Development of a Process for the Treatment of Electric Arc Furnace Dust and Other Urban Mining WastesMLA: Development of a Process for the Treatment of Electric Arc Furnace Dust and Other Urban Mining Wastes. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2014.