The Effect Of Oxygen Upon The Precipitation Of Metals From Cyanide Solutions - Discussion

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 3
- File Size:
- 137 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1919
Abstract
Louis D. MILLS, San Francisco, Cal. (written discussion *).-The principle involved in the Crowe vacuum precipitation process is so elementary and the apparatus required is so simple, that the whole subject affords scant material for a technical discussion. As. one prominent Colorado metallurgist recently remarked when asked to contribute to this paper: "The Crowe process is the biggest step forward since the early clays of the cyanide process, but there is nothing to write about; just put it in your mill and try it." The writer confesses to a similar feeling, but having been closely identified with the process since its inception in 1916, he is perhaps in a position to at least comment on the theory involved and to record some of the results that have been achieved in actual practise. In practising the Crowe process, the solutions to be precipitated are first vacuumized in a suitable dispersion tower; that is, thin films of the liquid are subject to the action of a vacuum within a receiver. Sub-
Citation
APA: (1919) The Effect Of Oxygen Upon The Precipitation Of Metals From Cyanide Solutions - Discussion
MLA: The Effect Of Oxygen Upon The Precipitation Of Metals From Cyanide Solutions - Discussion. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1919.