The Constitution of Copper Smelting Slags

The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining
Ruddle R. W.
Organization:
The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining
Pages:
13
File Size:
1362 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1953

Abstract

The slags produced in copper smelting are largely composed of silica and ferrous oxide and may therefore be regarded as essentially ferrous silicates. A fair amount of information is available on the constitutions of the liquid slags used in copper smelting and, in this connection, the large volume of work being carried out on steelmaking slags should be helpful. Constitutional diagrams are available for most of the principal systems involved (SiO2-FeO; SiO2-FeO-Al2O 3; SiO2-FeO-CaO; SiO2-FeO- MgO; and SiO2-FeO-CaO-Al2O3) and these show that additions of Al2O3 and CaO reduce the freezing points of SiO2-FeO slags but that additions of MgO increase the freezing point. A certain amount of information is available on the thermodynamics of slags, but much further work on this subject is required. Modern theories of the constitution of liquid slags deny the existence of molecular compounds but consider that liquid slags are mixtures of various ions such as, Fe2+. O2- and SiO4(4-). Little appears to be known of the reactions between matte and minor constituents dissolved in the slag
Citation

APA: Ruddle R. W.  (1953)  The Constitution of Copper Smelting Slags

MLA: Ruddle R. W. The Constitution of Copper Smelting Slags. The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining, 1953.

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