Conference Proceedings
Green Processing 2006
Conference Proceedings
Green Processing 2006
Characterisation of Australian Electric Arc Furnace (EAF) Dusts and the Application of Simple Physical Separation Techniques to Upgrade Them
Australian steelmakers produce up to 30 000 t/yr of electric arc furnace (EAF) dust. Current disposal techniques include sending EAF dust to landfill, stockpiling, and paying zinc smelters or registered waste removalists/processors to take the dust. Many of the complex overseas pyrometallurgical and hydrometallurgical treatment routes cited in the literature are not considered economic._x000D_
Governmental, environmental and social pressures on producers to consider more sustainable disposal options are mounting, and there is now a strong push to consider recovering potentially valuable or recyclable components, such as zinc and iron units, from EAF dust. As well, there remain strong economic drivers for producers to find lower cost disposal solutions._x000D_
Characterisation studies undertaken at CSIRO Minerals have revealed important physical differences in the nature of the zinc- and iron-bearing phases contained in domestic EAF dusts. These differences have been exploited using simple and cheap mineral processing techniques such as water washing, wet cycloning and wet magnetic separation. This has allowed a significant upgrade in the zinc content of EAF dust to be achieved, together with a reduction in the levels of key smelter penalty elements, such as chlorides and fluorides. The zinc-rich portion of the dust is now a more attractive smelter feed while the iron-rich part of the dust could potentially be briquetted or pelletised with a reductant and recycled to recover iron, and thus close the loop on dust processing._x000D_
The basis of the separations tested together with laboratory results from several Australian dust samples are presented and discussed in this paper._x000D_
FORMAL CITATION:Bruckard, W J, Davey, K J and Woodcock, J T, 2006. Characterisation of Australian electric arc furnace (EAF) dusts and the application of simple physical separation techniques to upgrade them, in Proceedings Green Processing 2006, pp 43-48 (The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy: Melbourne).
Governmental, environmental and social pressures on producers to consider more sustainable disposal options are mounting, and there is now a strong push to consider recovering potentially valuable or recyclable components, such as zinc and iron units, from EAF dust. As well, there remain strong economic drivers for producers to find lower cost disposal solutions._x000D_
Characterisation studies undertaken at CSIRO Minerals have revealed important physical differences in the nature of the zinc- and iron-bearing phases contained in domestic EAF dusts. These differences have been exploited using simple and cheap mineral processing techniques such as water washing, wet cycloning and wet magnetic separation. This has allowed a significant upgrade in the zinc content of EAF dust to be achieved, together with a reduction in the levels of key smelter penalty elements, such as chlorides and fluorides. The zinc-rich portion of the dust is now a more attractive smelter feed while the iron-rich part of the dust could potentially be briquetted or pelletised with a reductant and recycled to recover iron, and thus close the loop on dust processing._x000D_
The basis of the separations tested together with laboratory results from several Australian dust samples are presented and discussed in this paper._x000D_
FORMAL CITATION:Bruckard, W J, Davey, K J and Woodcock, J T, 2006. Characterisation of Australian electric arc furnace (EAF) dusts and the application of simple physical separation techniques to upgrade them, in Proceedings Green Processing 2006, pp 43-48 (The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy: Melbourne).
Contributor(s):
W J Bruckard, K J Davey, J T Woodcock
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- Published: 2006
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