Abstract

Waste copper slag is a typical hazardous solid waste containing a variety of valuable elements and has not been effectively disposed of so far. In this paper, a stepwise extraction process was proposed to recover valuable elements (copper, iron, lead and zinc) from waste copper slag. The specific procedures are as follows: (1) A flotation process was adopted to enrich copper, and when the copper grade in the flotation concentrate was 21.50%, the copper recovery rate was 77.78%. (2) The flotation tailings were pelletized with limestone, then the green pellets were reduced, and the magnetic separation process was carried out. When the iron and copper grades in the magnetic concentrate were 90.21% Fe and 0.4% Cu, 91.34% iron and 83.41% copper were recovered, respectively. (3) Non-magnetic tailings were mixed with clinker and standard sand to produce common Portland cement. Several products were obtained from the waste copper slag through the proposed process: flotation concentrate, measured 21.50% Cu; magnetic concentrate, containing 90.21% TFe and 0.4% Cu; direct reduction dust, including 65.17% ZnO and 2.66% PbO; common Portland cement for building construction. The comprehensive utilization method for waste copper slag achieved zero tailing and has great potential for practical application.

Highlights

  • IntroductionWaste copper slag (WCS) is a by-product produced in the copper pyrometallurgical process

  • One of the greatest challenges in the mining and processing industries is waste management and waste copper slag is defined as one such waste [1]

  • Waste copper slag (WCS) is a by-product produced in the copper pyrometallurgical process

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Summary

Introduction

Waste copper slag (WCS) is a by-product produced in the copper pyrometallurgical process. The slag contains a lot of harmful elements, such as Cu, Pb and Zn, which cause pollution to the environment. These elements are non-biodegradable and toxic and accumulate in human organisms, causing some physical disorders and health concerns [4,5,6]. WCS is classified as hazardous waste [7,8,9]. More than 80% of them are directly dumped without treatment, which may cause potential pollution [10,11]

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