Unique Hydrometallurgical Process for Copper-Anode Slime Treatment at Saganoseki Smelter and Refinery

  • Furuzono T
  • Fujimoto A
  • Takeuchi T
  • et al.
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Abstract

Saganoseki Smelter and Refinery of Pan Pacific Copper Co., Ltd. started treating copper anode slimes using a unique hydrometallurgical process in chloride media in 1997. The process comprises the following stages, decopperizing, wet chlorination, solvent extraction for gold, silver chloride reduction, and separate reduction stages that treat the gold extraction raffinate with sulfur dioxide gas. Precious metals and rare metals in the copper anode slimes are dissolved in an aqueous solution of hydrochloric acid by oxidative leaching, which is termed wet chlorination. Gold is efficiently extracted from the chlorination liquor by dibutyl carbitol in the solvent extraction stage. Gold is reduced by oxalic acid from gold-loaded dibutyl carbitol and recovered as gold powder. The gold powder is cast directly into granules or ingots of more than 99.99% purity without electrorefining. Selenium is recovered as a selenium residue by reduction with sulfur dioxide gas and refined through vacuum distillation. The plant was designed to process 132 tonnes of copper anode slimes per month and has a current capacity of 206 tonnes per month due to several enhancements. Compared with the conventional process, the hydrometallurgical process described here provides some advantages, in particular, a higher product quality, shorter gold-retention time, and reduction in environmental load.

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Furuzono, T., Fujimoto, A., Takeuchi, T., & Takebayashi, K. (2018). Unique Hydrometallurgical Process for Copper-Anode Slime Treatment at Saganoseki Smelter and Refinery (pp. 2075–2083). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-95022-8_173

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