Flash Smelting with 95% Oxygen Process Air in Ashio
 
    
    - Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 4
- File Size:
- 470 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1987
Abstract
The amount of copper production by flash  smelting process occupies about 17% (equivalent  to 1.4 million t/year) of total free world  production. In Japan, 650,000 tons of copper  is produced annually by flash smelting. This  is 65% of the gross copper production of Japan. To reinforce pollution control, promote  energy saving, and enhance production  efficiency by increasing the size of furnaces,  conventional blast furnaces and reverberatory  furnaces are being replaced with the flash  smelters worldwide. The Ashio Smelter started copper  production in 1884 and developed in association  with the Ashio mine. In those days, the Ashio  smelter produced copper by using the blast  furnace process designed for the high-grade ore  from the copper mine. At that time, this  process was specialized in Japan. In 1956, for the first time in Japan, the  Ashio Smelter introduced the flash smelting  process developed by Outokumpu Oy of Finland  (it is suitable for treating the copper  concentrate, producing sulfuric acid and  improving production efficiency). The flash furnace in Ashio, the first  ever in Japan, had a capacity of 230 t/day for  copper concentrate and was operated up to  1962. During this period, various operational  troubles were solved, and further improvements  were made; and, in 1962, a Furukawa-type flash  smelting furnace was completed in Ashio. This improved version of a flash furnace  had a capacity of 450 t/day. There was one  flash furnace and one waste heat boiler, which  were arranged in a unique pattern for that  time. This furnace may be said to be the  prototype of the present flash smelting process  in the world.
Citation
APA: (1987) Flash Smelting with 95% Oxygen Process Air in Ashio
MLA: Flash Smelting with 95% Oxygen Process Air in Ashio. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1987.
