The Constitution of Matte

The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining
Ruddle R. W.
Organization:
The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining
Pages:
20
File Size:
2035 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1953

Abstract

Solid mattes are generally held to be either (a) eutectiferous mixtures of the component sulphides Cu2S and FeS or (b) mixtures of complex sulphides. This chapter shows that liquid mattes consist essentially of a homogeneous phase in which iron, copper and sulphur are present. The amount of sulphur is generally less than that required to account for all the metals as stoichiometric sulphides; mattes cannot therefore be regarded as mixtures of FeS and Cu2S. Some iron oxide may be dissolved in the sulphide phase and magnetite is often present as a second phase. If the sulphur content of the matte is reduced the composition enters the miscibility gap in the ternary system and either an iron- or copper-rich solution (depending upon the composition of the matte) separates as a new phase. On solidification any one of four phases (iron, copper, Cu2S and FeS solid solutions) may crystallize as primaries. The remainder of the matte solidifies as a ternary eutectic. It is possible that iron oxides enter into this eutectic. Knowledge of the ternary Cu-Fe-S system is far from complete and nothing is known of the quaternary system Cu-Fe-S-O
Citation

APA: Ruddle R. W.  (1953)  The Constitution of Matte

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

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