Metal Recycling at Kosaka Smelter

The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Y. Maeda H. Inoue S. Kawamura H. Ohike
Organization:
The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Pages:
10
File Size:
634 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2000

Abstract

Kosaka smelter is a copper smelter located in Akita Prefecture in the northern part of Japan. It has treated complex sulfide concentrates for a long time. Recently, in addition to metal production from ores, the company has been working on the recycling of metals by using this metallurgical technology. Metals recovered are primarily gold, silver, palladium, copper and lead from copper scraps, electronic board scraps, silver oxide batteries, spent lead acid batteries, semiconductor chips, cellular phones, and automotive emissions catalyst. In particular, electronic board scraps and cellular phones can be valuable raw materials. These electronic scraps are fed into the flash smelting furnace after size reduction in a shredder that was introduced in 1999. Due to the growing demand for personal computers and cellular phones, the amount of electronic board scraps available for recycling increased. At present, these secondary materials are good raw materials for Kosaka smelter since the smelter is already used to dealing with complex raw materials. The recycled metals account for up between 5 and 20 percent of the total production at Kosaka Smelter. In particular, over 90 percent of the palladium in the secondary materials can be recovered.
Citation

APA: Y. Maeda H. Inoue S. Kawamura H. Ohike  (2000)  Metal Recycling at Kosaka Smelter

MLA: Y. Maeda H. Inoue S. Kawamura H. Ohike Metal Recycling at Kosaka Smelter. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 2000.

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