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Copper Slag containing 30% Si02 & 45% Fe

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natemclain

Industrial
Oct 29, 2007
5
Is there anyway to get rid of silica in a refinement process like using a blast furnace to make pig iron?
I have read everything I can find on making pig iron but I haven't run across anything that contains 30% silica. Most of the pig iron specs I have found contain 3% silica.
I'm curious if anyone has any information on how I could get the silica reduced to a managable level to produce pig iron.
Does anyone have any expertise in this area?

Nate
 
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Are you referring to silicon content or silica(SiO2). Pig irons contain nominally 3% Si.

In the copper slag that you have referred,SiO2 is 30% and it is very difficult to reduce SiO2 content and enrich your iron content.

SiO2 is a strong oxide and separating Si and O2 by reduction methods will be expensive and energy consuming.

I hope I have understood your needs and properly.

" All that is necessary for triumph of evil is that good men do nothing".
Edmund Burke
 
You are right about the silica. I mistyped when I was referring to 3% silica content in pig iron, I meant silicon content. My mistake on the ol keyboard. :)

Here is what I have from the lab. Can you provide any other help on this? I'm really just trying to see if I can even do anything with this pile of junk. Perhaps it can be recycled in the steel making process?

Ag SILVER < 0.10 OZ/TN LAB
Au GOLD < 0.004 OZ/TN LAB
Cu COPPER 1.1 % LAB
SiO2 SILICA 29.3% % LAB
Al203 ALUMINA 3.0 % LAB
Fe IRON 45.1 % LAB
CaO LIME 1.3 % LAB
S SULFUR 0.7 % LAB
As ARSENIC 0.019 % LAB
Ba BARIUM 0.064 % LAB
Be BERYLLIUM < 0.001 % LAB
Bi BISMUTH 0.042 % LAB
Cd CADMIUM 0.004 % LAB
Cl CHLORIDE 0.007 % LAB
Co COBALT 0.017 % LAB
Cr CHROMIUM 0.045 % LAB
F FLOURIDE 0.109 % LAB
Hg MERCURY < 0.1 % LAB
K POTASSIUM 0.746 % LAB
MgO MAGNESIA 1.354 % LAB
Mn MANGANESE 0.027 % LAB
Mo MOLYBDENUM 0.253 % LAB
Na SODIUM 0.231 % LAB
Ni NICKEL 0.005 % LAB
P PHOSPHORUS 0.029 % LAB
Pb LEAD 0.060 % LAB
Sb ANTIMONY 0.037 % LAB
Se SELENIUM < 0.001 % LAB
Sn TIN 0.018 % LAB
Te TELLURIUM < 0.001 % LAB
Tl THALLIUM < 0.001 % LAB
Zn ZINC 0.340 % LAB

What is the process that would be used to seperate the Si & O2 even if someone wants to try it? Would the silica flow off the iron in a blast furnace as slag and be at a managable level so that it would work for pig iron in the production of gray iron? Or steel making?

TIA!

Nate
 
As per the Ellingham diagram reduction of SiO2 is possible above 1500C. This might not be an economical way to reduce SiO2 .

Other than SiO2 your slag does not have any other element in significant amounts to be of commercial interest.

" All that is necessary for triumph of evil is that good men do nothing".
Edmund Burke
 
Can this stuff be crushed and then separated by flotation or frothing?
Yes, when you melt it the SiO2 will float, but it is hell on refractories and you have a lot.
The Cu is high also.
If this were higher value metals I might suggest acid digestion, but not for Fe.

= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
Still trying to help you stop corrosion.
formerly Trent Tube, now Plymouth Tube
eblessman@plymouth.com
or edstainless@earthlink.net
 
The material is small form 2" diameter & less. It could be crushed and separated I would think.
The strange thing is this material is a by product of copper refinement. And that is why I called is copper slag. That is what I was told it was. And the residual 1.1% copper is what they couldn't extract in the refinement process. But the biggest majority is iron. And that is why I was thinking it could be converted into pig iron.
I wonder if the material could be crushed and using a mag separator to pick up the iron and leave the silica, etc behind.
Any ideas?

Nate

 
Try posting in the extraction and production forum.

= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
Still trying to help you stop corrosion.
formerly Trent Tube, now Plymouth Tube
eblessman@plymouth.com
or edstainless@earthlink.net
 
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