GB2089375A - Autogenous oxygen smelting of sulphide materials containing base metals - Google Patents

Autogenous oxygen smelting of sulphide materials containing base metals Download PDF

Info

Publication number
GB2089375A
GB2089375A GB8132813A GB8132813A GB2089375A GB 2089375 A GB2089375 A GB 2089375A GB 8132813 A GB8132813 A GB 8132813A GB 8132813 A GB8132813 A GB 8132813A GB 2089375 A GB2089375 A GB 2089375A
Authority
GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
smelting
accordance
matte
copper
concentrate
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Withdrawn
Application number
GB8132813A
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Vale Canada Ltd
Original Assignee
Vale Canada Ltd
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Vale Canada Ltd filed Critical Vale Canada Ltd
Priority to GB8132813A priority Critical patent/GB2089375A/en
Publication of GB2089375A publication Critical patent/GB2089375A/en
Withdrawn legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C22METALLURGY; FERROUS OR NON-FERROUS ALLOYS; TREATMENT OF ALLOYS OR NON-FERROUS METALS
    • C22BPRODUCTION AND REFINING OF METALS; PRETREATMENT OF RAW MATERIALS
    • C22B5/00General methods of reducing to metals
    • C22B5/02Dry methods smelting of sulfides or formation of mattes
    • C22B5/12Dry methods smelting of sulfides or formation of mattes by gases
    • C22B5/14Dry methods smelting of sulfides or formation of mattes by gases fluidised material
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C22METALLURGY; FERROUS OR NON-FERROUS ALLOYS; TREATMENT OF ALLOYS OR NON-FERROUS METALS
    • C22BPRODUCTION AND REFINING OF METALS; PRETREATMENT OF RAW MATERIALS
    • C22B23/00Obtaining nickel or cobalt
    • C22B23/02Obtaining nickel or cobalt by dry processes
    • C22B23/025Obtaining nickel or cobalt by dry processes with formation of a matte or by matte refining or converting into nickel or cobalt, e.g. by the Oxford process

Abstract

A base metal sulphide concentrate, especially of nickel or copper, is mixed with roasted concentrate and the mixture is autogenously smelted, e.g. by flash smelting, with oxygen-containing gas and a flux for iron oxides, e.g. silica, to give a matte, a siliceous slag and a strong sulphur dioxide off-gas. The addition of the roasted concentrate facilitates control and improvement of the matte grade.

Description

SPECIFICATION Process for autogenous oxygen smelting of sulphide materials containing base metals Oxidation smelting of base metal sulphide materials, including concentrates, has become a useful process which has been adopted in many countries for the treatment of a variety of sulphide materials.
Metal sulphide materials which may be treated by this technique contain a variety of valuable metals including copper, nickel, cobalt, lead, zinc, etc. Usually valuable metal sulphide ores and concentrates will also contain large amounts of iron sulphides such as pyrite and pyrrhotites and can contain undesirable impurities such as arsenic, bismuth, etc. Sulphide mineralization frequently occurs in admixture, e.g. copper with zinc and/or lead, copper with nickel, etc. Metal sulphide concentrates generally are finely divided.
In oxidation smelting the finely divided metal sulphide material, such as sulphide concentrate, in admixture with a flux material for iron oxide, e.g. silica, is first dried to eliminate water and then is injected along with an oxygen containing gas, which can be oxygen enriched air or commercial oxygen, by means of a suitable device which may be a burner. Part of the iron and sulphur contents of the concentrate burn with the combustion being supported by oxygen in the gas injected with the result that combustion preferably is autogenous. For example, in autogenous flash smelting the mixture of concentrate plus oxygen or oxygen enriched air is injected into a refractory furnace in a manner such that the oxidation of the sulphide occurs in the freeboard space of the furnace and the molten products of the combustion fall into the hearth of the furnace.The valuable metals are collected in the matte phase. The oxidized iron is fluxed by the silica to form a slag which collects on top of the molten matte.
As desired, the matte and slag can be tapped at intervals. The process affords a means for smelting large quantities of sulphides on a continuous basis with generation of an off gas which can contain 80% or more by volume of sulphur dioxide when the oxidizing gas consists wholly of commercially pure oxygen. The rich ofi"-gas lends itself readily to treatment for recovery of liquid sulphur dioxide or for manufacture of sulphuric acid, thereby making the operation highly advantageous from an environmental aspect. Another advantage of the process is that the fuel for the process is iron sulphide which itself is not particularly valuable.
There is a well established prior art in regard to oxidation smelting and the technique is used through cut the world As examples Canadian patents Nos. 503,446 and 934,968 may be mentioned together with the book "The Winning of Nickel" by J. R. Boldt and P. Queneau, Longman's, Canada, at pages 2of,4 to 247 and various articles including the paper, "Oxygen Flash Smelting in a Converter" by M. C. Bell, J. A. Blanco, H. Davies and R. Sridhar, J. of Metals, Vol. 30, No. 10, pages 9--14, 1978; "Smelting Nickel Concentrates in Inco's Oxygen Flash Furnace", by M.Solar et al., 107th AIME Annual Meeting, Denver, Colorado, Feb. 26-March 2, 1 978, "The KíVCET Cyclone Smelting Process for Impure Copper Concentrates" by Melcher, E. Muller and H. Weigel, J. of Metals, July 1976, pages 4-8; Paper by T. Nagano and T. Suzukii "Commercial Operation of Mitsu-Bishi Continuous Copper Smelting and Converting Process", published in Extractive Metallurgy of Copper, edited by J. C. Yannopoulas and J. C. Agarwal, the Metallurgical Society of AIME, 1 976, Vol. 1, pages 439-457.
It is found that with any particular oxidation smelting furnace, it is necessary to arrive at a thermal equilibrium which is dependent upon the proportion of the sulphide concentrate burned. The heat generated by the combustion of the furnace feed, essentially of labiie S and FeS, to SO2 and iron oxides, equals the heat content of the smelting products (matte, slag and off-gas) plus the furnace heat losses.
This means that, for a given sulphide material and a given furnace, a sufficient amount of oxygen per unit weight of sulphides must be supplied to satisfy the heat balance of the operation. When this is done, the matte grade is fixed, and the amount of oxygen cannot be altered without producing either an excess or deficiency of heat. In other words, the furnace balance, all other things being equal, determines the matte grade or the overall degree of conversion of the sulphide materials into a final product. This rigid interdependence of the heat balance and degree of conversion is an important limitation of these processes. The present invention is directed to a means for controlling matte grade in oxidation smelting e.g. autogenous flash smelting at will.
The above mentioned interdependence of heat balance and degree of conversion of the concentrate in oxidation smelting, in particular autogenous oxygen flash smelting, makes it difficult to obtain the desired matte grades, especially when the concentrate has a low copper content and a high iron content. The interdependence of heat balance and matte grade applied to all of the aforementioned smelting processes.
It is to be appreciated that in the smelting of copper, as an example, the matte generated in the smelting furnace must be subjected to further treatment to provide blister copper which can in turn be transformed into high puritv copper products. The smelting furnace matte grade controls the supplementary operations which must be performed downstream so as to arrive at blister copper. Thus, the higher the grade of the smelting furnace copper matte, the less needs to be done in converters or other equipment so as to provide blister copper and the less difficult are the problems in meeting environmental standards in regard to the evolution of sulphur dioxide in such downstream operations. In some cases, it may be desirable, for example, to provide a matte from the smelting furnace having the composition of white metal, almost pure Cu2S.
A number of methods have been proposed for controlling the matte grade in oxygen flash smelting. Among these are: adding to the concentrate revert materials, such as dust, ground matte and slag skulls, etc.; water injection into the smelting; air dilution of the oxygen. All these alternatives consist in introducing a coolant into the smelting unit to use up the excess heat generated when a matte grade higher than that normally obtained in autogenous flash smelting is desired. They provide a way of achieving the same end result as the process of the present invention but they are not as attractive because higher oxygen additions are required and the processes become wasteful in energy utilization.
Except where otherwise steed, all proportions and percentages in this specification and claims are by weight.
The invention is based on the discovery that in oxidation smelting the matte grade generated in the smelting furnace can be controlled by partially or dead roasting a portion of the metal sulphide material to be smelted, mixing it which unroasted metal sulphide material and feeding the mixture to the smelting furnace along with flux in the usual manner. This technique permits an upgrading in the matte grade producedm, and is particularly applicable to oxygen flash smelting.
@ will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that process metallurgists involved with the milling and smelting of metal sulphide deposists will control the mill and smelter to provide the most efficient process which can be devised for treating the product of a particular ore body or avaiiable combinations of ore bodies. Despite the ingenuity of metallurgists involved in the recovery of the valuable minerals from ores the concentrates which is produced in the mill will vary greatly depending upon the nature of the ore. ThuS, valuable copper minerals such as chalchpyrite, chelcocite, etc., usually occur in ore bodies where' large quantities of iron sulphides which can be pyrite, pyrrhotite, etc., also can occur.In addition, certain copper sulphide minerals also include iron, as an example chalcopyrite. A similar situation occurs with nickel suplhide and other base metal sulphide minerals.
.-or example, if the ratio of iron sulphide to copper sulphide in the concentrate is high, the material will normally yield a low matte grade on autogenous oxygen smelting. In this case, the objective of the preset invention is to adjust the ratio of iron sulphide to copper sulphide in the smelting furnace feed so as to obtain the desired matte grade. This is achieved by partial or dead roast of a portion of the concentrate. Similar considerations apply to nickel sulphide or other base metal sulphide concentrates.
t will be appreciated that the roasting step which forms part of the invention may be accomplished, in equipment such as a fluid bed roaster to produce a gas containing at least 10% by volume of sulphur dioxide. which may be employed as feed for a sulphuric acid plant. In this way sulphur removed from the portion of concentrate which is roasted can be recovered and is not discharged to the atmosphere. Roasting in the fluid bed can be accomplished using air as the oxidant.
To minimise the amount of material to be handled, it is preferred to dead roast the portion that is to be roasted. The blend of roasted and dry unroasted material, mixed with siiicious flux, is injected into the smelting furnace in a stream of oxygen. The desired composition of matte to be obtained can bs controlled by adjusting the ratio of calcine to green sulphide material in the feed. For a given concentrate, heat balance calculations will dictate the relative proportions of calcine and green sulphide material 'j'tich have to be fed to yield the desired product on autogenous smelting.
The process of tlie present invention makes it possible to autogenously smelt copper concentrates of any composition to yield matte of desired grade. Thus, It becomes possible, in a one-step smelting operation, to smelt directly to white metal (Cu2S) or blister or crude copper. When white metal is produced. it can be converted to blister copper in a second autogenous oxidation smelting operation. In a similar manner, a low iron (~1% Fe) matte can be produced directly from nickel concentrates.Since a richer matte grade is achieved, in respect of the metal value being recovered, less converting is required downstream of the flash smelter again with benefits in terms of reduced fugitive emissions of sulphur dioxide. in the treatment of copper concentrates having high levels of other metals such as zinc and/or lead, matte grade control can be used to promote separation of copper from other metals.
This invention provides advantages over alternative methods of controlling the matte grade by adding coolants (reverts, scrap, water, etc.) to the smelting furnace. Less oxygen is required in the flash furnace sr-ce the fuel value of the concentrate is lowered to the required level by oxidation of a portion of its iron and sulphur conSent prior to the flash smelting operations. As a consequence there is an increase in the specific capacity of the furnace and less dusting due to the oxygen requirement per unit weight of feed thereby generating a lower volume of gases produced. As compared to a process using air dilution to control matte grade, the present process provides lower furnace off-gas volume.
decreased dusting and lower capital requirement for off-gas treatment apparatus.
irect -produc.ion of very high-grade copper mattes, i.e. mattes over 60% copper, in the smelting unit will result in furnace slags which will require treatment for base metal recovery before being discarded. in the cass of oxygen flash smelting of copper concentrates, the slag cleaning can be accomplished by a number of known processes such as treating the slag in a separate electric furnace as descriebed by Bricket al. in the article "Flash Smelting of Copper Concentrate",J. of Metals, Vol.
10(6). 1958, pp. 395-400; in a separate flash furnace with lower matte grade as described in Canadian Patent No. 503,446; or by slow-cooling as described by Subramanian and Themelis in J. of Metals, 'Jol. 24(4), 1972, pp. 33-33. The low grade matte or concentrate-obtained from the slag cleaning operation mass be recycled to the primary smelting unit. In the case of nickel, the slags from the primary smelting furnace can be cleaned in an electric furnace as described in "The latest development in nickel flash smelting at the Harjavalta Smelter" by T. Niemela and S. Harkki, Joint Meeting MMIJ AIME 1 972, Tokyo.Because nickel concentrates usually contain a significant amount of cobalt, which will report mainly in the slag of the primary smelting unit, the electric furnace slag cleaning operation will yield a secondary matte enriched in cobalt which can be processed separately by conventional methods to recover this metal as well as the nickel and other metal values.
Some examples will now be given: EXAMPLE I A chalcopyrite type of copper concentrate analyzing (wt.%): 29.7 Cu, 1.0 Ni, 30.7 Fe, 35.2 S was roasted with air at 8000C to yield a calcine with the following composition (wt.flA')): 35.0 Cu, 1.2 Ni, 37.8 Fe, 0.8 S. The Cu and the Fe in the calcine were mainly as CuFe2O4. Minor amounts of CuO and Fe203 were also present. Blends of this calcine and green concentrate were oxygen flash smelted in a miniplant flash furnace with sufficient oxygen to simulate a commercial autogenous operation.The amount of oxygen required for this purpose was calculated from heat and mass balances which predicted the matte grades which would be obtained in the commercial furnace at the various experimental calcine/green concentrate ratios. The blends of calcine and green concentrate were fed to the miniplant furnace at a rate of 8-9 kg/h. The flashing space temperature was about 14000 C. The following table summarizes the results: TABLE % Calcine Added Matte Grade, Yó (Cu + Uni)* Slag Composition (%) by Weight of Green Concentrate Expected** Obtained SiO2 Fe Cu 0 40.0 42.4 30.7 37.0 0.7 5.5 48.5 50.8 30.6 40.8 0.67 11.1 58.5 58.6 35.0 34.7 1.19 22.5 77.0 75.0 33.5 34.9 4.77 * %Ni in mattes: 1.5 Predicted from heat and mass balance calculations for an autogenous operation.
The results clearly show that matte grade is controlled in accordance with precepts of the invention wherein a portion of the concentrate is pre-roasted prior to smelting.
The slags were fluid in all the above tests. Excellent separation of mattes from slags was observed.
EXAMPLE II A copper concentrate and calcine of the same compositions as in Example I were blended in a proportion of 100:30 and flash smelted with oxygen in the miniplant flash furnace. According to the heat and mass balance calculations for the commercial autogenous operation, the proportions of oxygen, concentrate and calcine used in this example were expected to yield a final copper product close in composition to metallic copper.After smelting under conditions similar to those in Example I, the following products were obtained: Composition, wt. % Cu Ni Fe S SiO2 Al2O3 CaO MgO Fe3O4 Crude Copper 97.2 0.68 0.02 1.0 Slag 10.5 0.59 38.0 0.02 20.5 2.38 7.7 2.3 32.3 The slag was slowly cooled, comminuted and subjected to froth flotation, resulting in slag copper concentrate containing 70.4% Cu and slag fiotation tails containing only 0.53% Cu.
This example illustrates how this invent;on can provide for directly obtaining a product of as high grade as crude copper, in one stage oxidation smelting process under autogenous conditions and at very high extraction of copper.
EXAMPLE III One part of a nickel concentrate calcine analyzing (wt.%): 10.0 Ni, 2.9 Cu, 41.7 Fe, 0.33 Co, 9.5 SiO2, 6.8 S was mixed with four parts of a green concentrate analyzing (wt.%): 1 5.1 Ni, 1.9 Cu, 0.5 Co, 38.5 Fe, 6.75 SiO2, 32.0 S. The blend was oxygen flash smelted in a miniplant flash furnace at a rate of 8 kg/h and at a temperature in the flashing space of about 14000 C. The amount of oxygen was also determined from the heat and mass balance calculations to simulate a commercial autogenous operation.The matte obtained analyzed in wt. %: 54.8 Ni, 9.9 Cu, 0.79 Co, 8.4 Fe, 23.7 S and the slag obtained analyzed in wt. 56: 0.54 Cu, 2.8 Ni, 0.3 Co, 33.1 Fe, 0.15 S, 38 Six2, 6.8 Awl203,10 Fe3O4. The iron-silica slag was fluid and separated well from the matte. The results of this test demonstrated that oxygen flash smelting of nickel calcine -- green nickel concentrate blends is technically feasible.
EXAMPLE IV One part of the same nickel calcine was biended with 2.33 parts of the same nickel concentrate and the blend was oxygen flash smelted under conditions expected to yield a matte with only about 1.5% Fe. The following products were obtained: Compositions, wt. % Cu Ni Co Fe S SiO2 Awl203 Fe304 Matte 14.6 61.9 0.18 1.8 21.6 - - - Slag 0.81 6.0 0.43 36.8 0.05 31.2 4.6 16.0 The iron silicate was fluid and separated well from the matte.
The results of these tests demonstrated clearly that the oxidation smelting of nickel calcine/nickel green concentrate blends can be effected autogenously up to a very high matte grade, in fact, up to the grade which is known as a nickel converter matte.
Although the present invention has been described in conjunction with preferred embodiments, it is to be understood that it is not limited thereto. As an example, although the smelting of sulphide concentrates has been described in detail, other sulphide materials equivalent in general metallurgical characteristics to sulphide concentrates, e.g., furnace mattes, can be treated in accordance with precepts of the invention. As noted hereinbefore, for a given sulphide material and a given furnace a sufficient amount of oxygen per unit weight of sulphides must be provided to supply the heat balance of the operation. Thus, for a given sulphide material, heat balance calculations will establish the relative proportions of calcined and uncaicined material to be employed, matte grade, or whether the given sulphide material is treatable by oxidation smelting.It will be apparent from the foregoing description that oxidation smelting, e.g., autogenous oxygen flash smelting, can be carried out in two stages. Thus copper concentrate can be flash smelted in a first operation to a matte grade of about 55% while producing a slag which can be discarded; the matte can be granulated, ground and smelted in a second flash smelter to yield white metal or blister copper with the slag from the second flash smelter being returned to the first smelter operation. Alternatively the slag from the second operation can be slow cooled, concentrated and the concentrate returned. Calcine can be fed to either or both of the flash smelting operations along with the sulphide feed in accordance with heat balance requirements and to control product grade therefrom. Such modifications and variations are considered to be within the purview and scope of the invention and appended claims.

Claims (12)

1. The process in which a sulphide material containing base metals is combusted autogenously with an oxygen-containing gas characterised by roasting a portion of the metal sulphide to be smelted, blending the portion of roasted material with further green metal sulphide, and autogenously smelting the resulting blend of roasted and green material with oxygen in a bounded space and in the presence of a flux for iron oxides to produce a high grade product, a molten siliceous slag and a strong sulphur dioxide off-gas.
2. A process according to claim 1 in which the autogenous combustion is effected by oxygen flash smelting.
3. A process in accordance with either of claims 1 and 2 in which the metal sulphide is a copper concentrate.
4. A process in accordance with either of claims 1 and 2 in which the metal sulphide is a nickel concentrate.
5. A process in accordance with either of claims 1 and 2 in which the metal sulphide is a furnace matte.
6. A process in accordance with any preceding claim in which the roasting is conducted in a fluid bed to produce a strong sulphur dioxide-containing off-gas which can be converted to sulphuric acid.
7. A process in accordance with any of claims 1 to 6 in which the portion of roasted feed is dead roasted.
8. A process in accordance with claim 3 in which the roasted and unroasted portions of the concentrate are proportioned to provide essentially Cu2S in the smelted matte and said Cu2S is converted to blister copper in a second autogenous oxidation step.
9. A process in accordance with claim 3, in which the high grade product is a matte containing at least 60% copper.
10. A process in accordance with claim 3 in which the high grade product is white metal.
11. A process in accordance with claim 3 in which the high grade product is crude copper.
12. A process in accordance with any preceding claim in which the smelting is carried out in more than one furnace and calcine is intermixed with the feed to any or each of the smelting furnaces.
GB8132813A 1980-10-31 1981-10-30 Autogenous oxygen smelting of sulphide materials containing base metals Withdrawn GB2089375A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB8132813A GB2089375A (en) 1980-10-31 1981-10-30 Autogenous oxygen smelting of sulphide materials containing base metals

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB8035134 1980-10-31
GB8132813A GB2089375A (en) 1980-10-31 1981-10-30 Autogenous oxygen smelting of sulphide materials containing base metals

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB2089375A true GB2089375A (en) 1982-06-23

Family

ID=26277381

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB8132813A Withdrawn GB2089375A (en) 1980-10-31 1981-10-30 Autogenous oxygen smelting of sulphide materials containing base metals

Country Status (1)

Country Link
GB (1) GB2089375A (en)

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE3341154A1 (en) * 1983-11-14 1985-05-30 Vsesojuznyj naučno-issledovatel'skij gorno-metallurgičeskij institut cvetnych metallov, Ust-Kamenogorsk Method for processing sulphidic copper concentrates and/or copper/zinc concentrates
WO1993024666A1 (en) * 1992-05-23 1993-12-09 The University Of Birmingham Oxygen smelting

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE3341154A1 (en) * 1983-11-14 1985-05-30 Vsesojuznyj naučno-issledovatel'skij gorno-metallurgičeskij institut cvetnych metallov, Ust-Kamenogorsk Method for processing sulphidic copper concentrates and/or copper/zinc concentrates
WO1993024666A1 (en) * 1992-05-23 1993-12-09 The University Of Birmingham Oxygen smelting

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US4415356A (en) Process for autogenous oxygen smelting of sulfide materials containing base metals
US4615729A (en) Flash smelting process
US4802916A (en) Copper smelting combined with slag cleaning
CA2395995C (en) Method for the production of blister copper in suspension reactor
US3351462A (en) Electric furnace smelting of copper concentrates
US4802917A (en) Copper smelting with calcareous flux
US4487628A (en) Selective reduction of heavy metals
US4519836A (en) Method of processing lead sulphide or lead-zinc sulphide ores, or sulphide concentrates, or mixtures thereof
CA2137714C (en) Method for producing high-grade nickel matte from at least partly pyrometallurgically refined nickel-bearing raw materials
US4344792A (en) Reduction smelting process
US4521245A (en) Method of processing sulphide copper- and/or sulphide copper-zinc concentrates
JPH0665657A (en) Production of high-purity nickel mat and metallized sulfide mat
US3857701A (en) Smelting of copper oxides to produce blister copper
US4049438A (en) Non-ferrous metal recovery from deep sea nodules
GB2089375A (en) Autogenous oxygen smelting of sulphide materials containing base metals
GB2088413A (en) Process for Autogenous Oxygen Smelting of Sulphide Materials Containing Base Metals
FI73741C (en) Process for continuous production of raw cups.
JPH0152454B2 (en)
CA1212842A (en) Method of processing lead sulphide or lead/zinc sulphide ores, or sulphide concentrates, or mixtures thereof
CN114990348A (en) Method for producing blister copper from copper-nickel slag
Sharma Industrial Aspects of Inorganic Chemistry
MXPA94009508A (en) Method for producing high-grade nickel matte from at least partly pyrometallurgically refined nickel-bearing raw materials

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
WAP Application withdrawn, taken to be withdrawn or refused ** after publication under section 16(1)