Copper smelting and converting: past and present Chilean developments

Devia M.; Parra R.; Queirolo C.; Sánchez M.; Wilkomirsky, I.

Abstract

© 2018, © 2018 Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining and The AusIMM Published by Taylor & Francis on behalf of the Institute and The AusIMM.Since the second part of the twentieth century, Chile has become the largest copper producer in the world, being the pyrometallurgical processing of sulfides concentrates a central part of it. Since the introduction of the Peirce-Smith and later the Hoboken converters in Chilean smelters, some modifications were made to these reactors, including feeding of copper concentrate and intensive oxygen enrichment utilisation to increase their productivity. These modifications, and the use of bone dry concentrates, later became part of the new Teniente technology to smelt concentrates. All these innovations also influenced other processes, such as slag and gas treatment. This paper shows how pyrometallurgical processing of copper concentrates has been developed in Chile and how the Teniente reactor was conceived and implemented. Also, a comparison between nonferrous and ferrous technologies in terms of instrumentation and control, and some new processes being developed at laboratory and scale are shown.

Más información

Título según SCOPUS: Copper smelting and converting: past and present Chilean developments
Título de la Revista: Mineral Processing and Extractive Metallurgy: Transactions of the Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Volumen: 128
Número: 1-2
Editorial: TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
Fecha de publicación: 2019
Página de inicio: 108
Página final: 116
Idioma: English
DOI:

10.1080/25726641.2018.1542050

Notas: WOS-ESCI, SCOPUS