Title of article :
Copper removal by chelating adsorption in solution purification of hydrometallurgical zinc production
Author/Authors :
Laatikainen، نويسنده , , Katri and Lahtinen، نويسنده , , Marko and Laatikainen، نويسنده , , Markku and Paatero، نويسنده , , Erkki، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Abstract :
Use of the chelating adsorbent CuWRAM® in the copper removal step of hydrometallurgical zinc process has been studied. This adsorbent contains 2-(aminomethyl)pyridine groups anchored on a polyamine–silica composite and it binds copper and other transition metals by a chelating adsorption mechanism. Equilibrium binding capacity of metal sulfates and sulfuric acid from synthetic and authentic ZnSO4 process solution was determined at 25–90 °C using batch adsorption measurements. The copper removal efficiency was tested using a laboratory-scale fixed-bed column.
s of the equilibrium measurements show that the selectivity of CuWRAM® is sufficient for feasible separation of copper in the presence of 250-fold zinc excess. Increasing the operation temperature from 25 °C to 60 °C affects only slightly the binding capacity of copper and at the same time decreases the capacity of zinc. In column separation, increasing temperature substantially improves copper removal efficiency from the ZnSO4 process solution. The improvement is mainly due to enhanced intra-particle mass transport. The positive effect is further amplified by marked decrease in viscosity of the feed solution. The optimum temperature for copper removal appears to be around 60 °C. According to the results of this study, copper can be separated from the authentic ZnSO4 solution by the chelating adsorbent, while nickel, cobalt and cadmium must be separated by means of conventional methods like cementation with zinc dust. A process scheme is proposed for the solution purification step in the zinc process.
Keywords :
Chelating adsorbent , hydrometallurgy , Solution purification , Fixed-bed separation , Zinc
Journal title :
HYDROMETALLURGY
Journal title :
HYDROMETALLURGY