EPA-600/2-80-168
                                          July  1980
         INDUSTRIAL  PROCESS  PROFILES
           FOR ENVIRONMENTAL USE:
                CHAPTER 27
           PRIMARY LEAD INDUSTRY
                     by

          PEDCo Environmental,  Inc.
             11499 Chester Road
           Cincinnati,  Ohio  45246
           Contract No.  68-03-2577
               Project Officer

               John 0. Burckle
      Energy Pollution Control Division
Industrial  Environmental  Research Laboratory
           Cincinnati, Ohio  45268
INDUSTRIAL ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LABORATORY
     OFFICE OF RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT
    U.S.  ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
           CINCINNATI, OHIO  45268

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                              DISCLAIMER
     This report has been reviewed by the Industrial  Environmental  Research
Laboratory-Cincinnati, U. S. Environmental  Protection Agency, and approved
for publication.  Approval does not signify that the contents necessarily
reflect the views and policies of the U. S. Environmental  Protection Agency,
nor does mention of trade names or commercial  products constitute endorse-
ment or recommendation for use.

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                              TABLE OF CONTENTS
INDUSTRY DESCRIPTION
     Raw Materials
     Products
     Companies
     Environmental Impact
     References
INDUSTRY ANALYSIS
     Process No.  1,
     Process No.  2,
     Process No.  3,
     Process No.  4,
     Process No.  5,
     Process No.  6,
     Process No.  7,
     Process No.  8,
     Process No.  9,
     Process No.  10,
     Process No.  11,
     Process No.  12,
     Process No.  13,
     Process No.  14,
     Process No.  15,
     Process No.  16,
     Process No.  17,
     Process No.  18,
     Process No.  19,
     Process No.  20,
     Process No.  21,
     Process No.  22,
Mining
Concentrating
Sintering
Contact Sulfuric Acid Plant
Blast Furnace
Slag Fuming Furnace
Dressing
Dross Reverberatory Furnace
Cadmium Recovery
 Reverberatory Softening
 Kettle Softening
 Harris Softening
 Antimony Recovery
 Parkes Desilverizing
 Retorting
 Cupelling
 Vacuum Dezincing
 Chlorine Dezincing
 Harris Dezincing
 Debismuthizing
 Bismuth Refining
 Final  Refining and Casting
 1
 1
 3
 3
 7
 7

 9
12
16
23
31
35
42
47
50
52
53
56
58
60
62
64
65
67
69
70
72
74
75
                                    m

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                               LIST OF TABLES

Table                                                                 Page
.. _.                                                                       Ji..

  1       Lead Minerals, By Name and Composition                        2

  2       Twenty-Five Leading Lead-Producing Mines in the United
          States in 1976, in Order of Output                            4

  3       Principal Statistics for the Primary Lead Industry in
          the United States in 1978                                     5

  4       U.S.  Primary Lead Producers                                   6

  5       Analysis of a Missouri Mine Water                            14

  6       Analysis of an Idaho Mine Water                              14

  7       Typical  Southeastern Missouri Lead Concentrate
          Analyses                                                     17

  8       Western  Lead Concentrate Analyses                            18

  9       Flotation Chemicals                                          20

 10       Lead Mill Wastewater Analysis                                21

 11       Sinter Analysis                                              24

 12       Sinter Machine Feed                                          25

 13       Grain Loading and Weight Analysis of Input Feed and
          Emissions Updraft Lead Sintering Machine                     26

 14       Typical  Size Profile of Emissions, Updraft Lead
          Sintering Machine                                            26

 15       Analysis of Sinter Machine Exhaust Gases (Missouri
          Lead Operating Company)                                      28

 16       Atmospheric Control  Systems on Primary Lead Sintering
          Machines                                                     29

 17       Wastewater Treatment at Primary Lead Acid Plants             34
                                     IV

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                         LIST OF TABLES (Continued)
Table                                                                 Page
 18       Scrubber Wastewater Treatment at Primary Lead Plants         34
 19       Lead Bullion Composition                                     36
 20       Typical Blast Furnace Slag Analysis                          37
 21       Typical Blast Furnace Charge                                 38
 22       Exhaust Gas Analysis After Air Dilution and CO
          Combustion                                                   39
 23       Atmospheric Control Systems on Primary Lead Blast
          Furnaces                                                     41
 24       Waste Effluents from Slag Granulation                        43
 25       Effluent Concentrations with Neutralization and
          Clarification                                                44
 26       Primary Lead Slag Granulation Wastewater Treatment           45
 27       Lead Bullion Analysis                                        48
 28       Typical Compositions of Softened Lead Bullion and Slag
          (Amounts in Weight Percent)                                  54
 29       Typical Retort Analysis                                      64
                               LIST OF FIGURES
Figure
  1       Primary U.S. Lead Smelting and Refining Locations             8
  2       Lead Industry Flowsheet                                      10

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                                LEAD INDUSTRY


INDUSTRY DESCRIPTION

     Although primary lead refinery production increased somewhat in 1978,
mine production and consumption declined.   Curtailed use of lead antiknock
compounds in gasoline accounts for a significant portion of this reduction
in spite of the fact that such use still  represents 15 percent of lead
consumption (1).   Other areas of lead consumption have also decreased.   Lead
pigments are now rarely used in paints, and lead has been partially replaced
in such applications as plumbing, battery manufacture, packaging, protective
coatings, and construction.

     Although new methods of production are being developed, few techno-
logical changes have occurred in domestic commercial operations; lead is
still being produced with the same pyrometallurgical techniques introduced
75 years ago.  The one major exception to this lack of innovation is the
replacement of all downdraft sinter machines with the updraft type.

     The most significant recent development in the U.S. lead industry was
the discovery and development of the "New Lead Belt" in southeastern
Missouri.  Mining of this deposit began in 1967 and now more than 80 percent
of the ore mined in the United States specifically for lead comes from this
region.  A portion of this deposit consists of almost pure galena, analyzing
at over 70 percent lead with only very small amounts of other metals.

     Three of the six U.S. lead smelters are near the New Missouri lead
belt; the others are located in Idaho, Montana, and Texas.  The industry
employs about 7000 people; two-thirds of this number are employed in mining
and concentrating operations (1).

Raw Materials

     Lead is most often found in nature as galena (PbS), the primary sulfide
of lead.  Deposits are rarely pure since the lead-bearing compound is usu-
ally mixed with pyrite, sphalerite, and pyrrhotite.  Most of these deposits
contain very little copper.

     Oxidized lead ores also occur and are composed primarily of anglesite
and cerussite, the weathered products of galena.  Table 1 lists the  impor-
tant lead ore minerals, together with others in which the lead  is combined
with phosphorus, vanadium, and other elements.

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TABLE 1.   LEAD MINERALS,  BY NAME AND COMPOSITION
Mineral
Galena
Angles ite
Cerussite
Pyromorphite
Vanadinite
Crocoite
Wu If en ite
Linarite
Composition
PbS
PbS04
PbC03
Pb5Cl(P04)3
Pb5ci(vo4)3
PbCr04
PbMo04
PbO-CuO-S03 H20
Lead, %
88.6
68.3
77.5
76.3
73.0
63.9
56.4


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     Domestic production of lead pomes chiefly from ores mined primarily for
their lead content.   Additional  lead is derived from ores in which lead and
zinc are comparably valued as coproducts and it is also recovered as a
byproduct from ores mined for copper,  gold,  silver, zinc, or fluorine.
Complex ores mined in the Rocky Mountains are greatly dependent for eco-
nomical recovery on the values of the  lead,  zinc,  silver, and gold content
and not the value of just one metal (2).  Table 2  list the 25 leading lead
producing mines in the United States in 1976.

     Most lead produced in this country is from domestic ores.  Little is
produced from imported concentrates.  General imports of lead represented 20
percent of total consumption in 1978 (3).  A considerable quantity is pro-
duced first at zinc smelters, the residues then being sent to lead smelters
for recovery of lead.

     In the production of lead metal,  the industry requires various other
raw materials.  Explosives, water, and various organic chemicals are used in
mining and concentrating operations; pyrometallurgical smelting and refining
require various fluxing materials such as limestone and silica and fuel in
the form of coke, oil, or natural gas.

     Energy requirements for lead production involving mining, concentrat-
ing, smelting, and refining are lower than any of the other major metals.
The production of 1 ton of lead is estimated to require 6.8 x 106 kilo-
calories; this figure  is about one-fourth that for refined copper and less
than one-half that of  zinc (2).

Products

     Lead bullion more than 99.9 percent pure is the primary product of this
industry.  Antimonial  lead, a less ductile metal,  is also produced.  In
1976,  the processing of lead ores and concentrates accounted  for 100 percent
of domestic bismuth production, as well as 56 percent of antimony, and
sizable quantities of  zinc, silver, tellurium, copper, and gold.  Appreci-
able quantities of sulfur and sulfuric  acid  are also recovered as byproducts
of lead production.  Byproduct and coproduct associations in  lead production
in the  rest of the world are similar to those found domestically (2).

     Table 3  provides  basic 1978 statistics  of the lead  industry.

Companies

     The  United States  leads the world  in lead production, accounting  for
about  15  percent  of  the total world mine production  in  1978  (3).   In that
year,  the domestic mining  industry was  comprised  of  about 35  mines  in  11
states  with production valued at $398 million  (3).   The  seven leading  mines,
all  in  Missouri,  produced 88 percent  of the  year's total mine production  of
recoverable metal  (1).

     Domestic primary  smelters  are  located  in  Missouri,  Montana, Texas,  and
Idaho.  As  shown  in  Table 4,  four  companies  operate  four integrated  lead
smelters/refineries, two  lead  smelters,  and  one lead refinery.   Each  of

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              TABLE 3.   PRINCIPAL STATISTICS FOR THE
      PRIMARY LEAD INDUSTRY IN THE UNITED STATES IN 1978 (3)

Primary lead produced,  metric tons

     Mine (recoverable)                                   529,661
     Refinery (refined  lead)                              566,417
     Refinery (antimonial  lead, lead content)               4,296

Exports, metric tons

     Lead materials excluding scrap (lead content)          8,225
     Lead ore and concentrates (lead content)              54,231

Imports, metric tons

     Ores and concentrates (lead content)                  52,985
     Refined metal                                        225,620

Consumption, metric tons

     Reported                                           1,432,744

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these companies also operates a zinc smelter; however, the zinc and lead
operations are not located near each other except in Kellogg, Idaho.   Figure
1 indicates the locations of domestic primary lead smelters and refineries.

     In 1978 approximately 2,400 persons were employed at lead smelters and
refineries.  Approximately 4700 persons were employed at domestic mines and
mills producing lead, lead-silver, or lead-zinc ores or concentrates (3).

     Many of the companies producing primary lead are vertically integrated
and therefore are involved in two or more process segments.  These firms may
process other metals such as zinc, copper, and gold, with recovery of these
metals often making the mining and processing of lead economically feasible.

Environmental Impact

     The primary lead industry emits fine particulate and sulfur dioxide to
the atmosphere.  The particulate contains metals such as lead, cadmium, and
arsenic and originates from sinter machines, blast furnaces, slag fuming,
dressing, cadmium recovery, reverberatory softening, and antimony recovery
operations.  Control of sulfur dioxide emissions is a significant problem
for the industry because of all the sources only one gas stream produced by
the sintering machine is amenable to sulfuric acid production.

     Unlike the copper industry, most lead smelters are located in areas
where rainfall exceeds evaporation and consequently recycle of process
waters is not completely practicable.  Therefore, water pollution can be a
problem at lead mines, mills, and smelters.  Toxic flotation agents may be
discharged from mills, and runoff from smelter property can contain heavy
metals.  Holding ponds are used for treatment of these waste streams; how-
ever, some escape is inevitable.

References

     1.   Commodity Data Summaries.  1979.  U.S. Department of the Interior,
          Bureau of Mines.  Washington, D.C.  1979.

     2.   Mineral Commodity Profiles, Lead-1977.  U.S. Department of Inte-
          rior, Bureau of Mines.  Washington, D.C.  1977.

     3.   Mineral Industry Surveys, Lead  Industry Monthly.  June 1979.  U.S.
          Department of the Interior, Bureau of Mines.  Washington, D.C.
          August 1979.

     4.   Minerals Yearbook 1976.  U.S. Department of Interior, Bureau of
          Mines.  Washington, D.C.  1978.

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INDUSTRY ANALYSIS

     This industry analysis examines each production process to define its
purpose and its environmental effects.   Each process is analyzed as follows:

     1.   Function
     2.   Input Materials
     3.   Operating Conditions
     4.   Utilities
     5.   Waste Streams
     6.   Control Technology
     7.   EPA Classification Code
     8.   References

     This section includes only the processes that are now operating in the
United States or that are under construction.  Figure 2 is a flowsheet
showing the processes, their interrelationships, and their major waste
streams.

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                      REFINERY SLAGS -
                             COKE
                             FLUX
  COM. OR COtt-]
OTHER INOR6ANIC J
   ADDITIVES
SLAG
FUMINC
FUR


IIACt „
6

            T
             I AIR

            V SOLID
Figure 2.   Lead  industry  flowsheet.
                   10

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Figure 2 (continued)
         11

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  PRIMARY  LEAD  PRODUCTION
                                                              PROCESS NO   1
  1.    Function - Ore deposits containing economically recoverable amounts of
  lead  are excavated and transported to an ore concentration plant.  Most lead
  ore is obtained from underground mines that use normal stoping methods (1 2)
  rut *M f-n  C?+;n2' room-and-P111ar> Wlth and without rock bolting; and'
  cut-and-fill  with timber supports.  After the ore is cut from the deposit,
  belt, ™de?< ?h   tSU rface,b^ ra11 tram> trackless shuttle cars, or conveyor
  +1  I  K ,1       transported to ore concentrating facilities by rail car
  truck, belt conveyor, or a combination thereof.
 2'
- The major Jead-containing minerals,  with composition
 Presented ln Tab1e I-   The most common are galena
 no H   if-H                              -                    re gaena
 (lead sulfide), cerussite (lead carbonate),  and anglesite (lead sulfate)
 n±tna °™ ^it* n™ the most abundant ^ nature and are the most fre:
 quent y used in the United States as a source of lead.   The deposits usually

 b?±th Ot?nr 1ementS SUC,h aS ZinC' 9°ld' Cadmium' antimony Trsen?c  a  ^
 bismuth.   In a few areas, however,  such as southeastern Missouri,  the ore

 other minerals           d ^ Slmpl6 mineral1zation and virtual  exclusion of


      The  economically important deposits of  lead ore in the United States
 asso'cia'te^i'h CatVlt^fi11. in9s ^  replacements, the origin of which is
 associated with intrusive igneous masses.

                H-  ammo"iul'1 m'trate  and fuel  oil  (AN-FO) is  used  for blasting
 powe  (3)                    " added t0 the  ml'XtUre t0  increase  Casting

 3.    Operatinci Conditions -  Mining  is  performed  under ambient  conditions.

 4.    Utilities  - Electricity  is  used for operation  of equipment  in  under-
 ground mining  and  transport.   Diesel  fuel  and electricity are  required  for
 ore  transport  equipment at the surface.   Specific energy requirements fo?
 the  mining  equipment  are  not  reported.                   requirements ror

      A small quantity  of  water is required for miscellaneous uses such  as
 equipment washing, dust control  spraying, and sanitation facilities

 5.    Waste  Streams - The  mining  of  lead  ore generates dust  in drillinq
 dust  ImL nn  ic9i'innd transport operations.   Estimated average fugitive
 ?rom  severll tvn J10f9ram? per metnc ton of ore' based "P™ observations
 rrom  several types of  nonferrous mining.

     Wastewater from lead mining results from several sources  the worst of
which is.probably seepage of surface water through spo 1 piles- others
our ots1? 5%TPti2n °f,^uifers and wate^ sent  into'the Sine for utility
purposes (5,6).  The water is pumped from the mine at a rate necessary to
maintain mining operations.   The required pumping rate bears no relatior J to
                                     12

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the ore output and is subject to seasonal variation.  The rate can range
from a few cubic meters to thousands of cubic meters per day.

     Along with small amounts of oil and hydraulic fluid resulting from
spills or leaks, the wastewater contains dissolved and suspended solids that
reflect the composition of the ore being mined.  Analysis of wastewater from
a Missouri and an Idaho mine are given in Tables 5 and 6.  In general,
chemical characteristics of the water are typical of those from any sulfide
mine in the same geographic area.

     Substantial amounts of solid waste result from underground mining
operations, the estimated average for 1973 being 0.13 ton per ton of ore
mined (4).  This waste material consists of the country-rock surrounding the
ore body plus low-grade lead ore contained in it.  The normal method of
disposal is to pile this waste in a location near the mouth of the mine.

6.   Control Technology - Fugitive dust emissions are controlled by the
manual use of water sprays or oil  as needed.

     Wastewater is generally treated with lime and impounded as practiced in
copper mining.  Since water from Missouri mines is already basic, liming may
not be required for pH adjustment.   Water from western lead mines is acidic
and is treated similarly to that from copper mines.   After treatment, the
wastewater is reused in ore milling operations.

     The solid waste or spoil generated by the mining operation is often
used as support and landfill  material for highway construction.   When it
cannot be so used, it is placed in a waste dump located so that it should
not contaminate a stream or underground aquifer.   Prevention of water seep-
age is important in this regard.

7.   EPA Source Classification Code - None

8.   References -

     1.    Mineral Facts and Problems.   U.S.  Department of the Interior,
          Bureau of Mines.   Washington, D.C.   1970.

     2.    Minerals Yearbook.   U.S.  Department of the Interior,  Bureau of
          Mines.   Washington, D.C.   1973.

     3.    Encyclopedia of Chemical  Technology.   Interscience Publishers, a
          division of John Wiley and Sons,  Inc.   New York.   1967.

     4.    Development Document for Interim Final  and Proposed Effluent
          Limitations Guidelines and New Source Performance Standards for
          the Ore Mining and  Dressing Industry.   Point Source Category
          Volumes I  and II.   Environmental  Protection Agency.   Washington,
          D.C.   EPA-1-75/032-6.   February 1975.
                                      13

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TABLE 5.  ANALYSIS OF A MISSOURI MINE WATER (7,8)
     Component
    Mercury
    Cadmi urn
    Chromium
    Manganese
    Iron
    Sulfate
    Chloride
    Fluoride
Concentration, mg/1
   0.001 to 0.002
  <0.002 to 0.058
  <0.010 to 0.17
  <0.02 to 57.2
  <0.02 to 2.5
   63.5 to 750
  <0.01 to 57
   0.063 to 1.2
 TABLE 6.   ANALYSIS OF AN IDAHO MINE WATER (6)
Constituent
pH
Sulfate as SO/
Total iron
Zinc
Nickel
Copper
Manganese
Aluminum
Lead
Cadmium
Concentration,
ppm
2.2
63,000.0
16,250.0
14,560.0
4.8
13.4
2,625.0
347.0
0.8
22.5
Constituent
Magnesium
Calcium
Potassium
Sodium
Chromium
Chloride
Nitrate as NO?
\j
Electrical con-
ductivity
(micromhos @ 25°C)
Concentration,
ppm
1,500.0
31.6
0.7
0.5
0.3
38.0
77.5
48,000.0


                         14

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5.   Hawley, J.R.  The Problem of Acid Mine Drainage in the Province of
     Ontario.  Ontario Ministry of the Environment.  Toronto.  1977.

6.   Williams, R.E.  Waste Production and Disposal in Mining, Milling,
     and Metallurgical Industries.  Miller Freeman Publications, Inc.
     San Francisco.  1975.

7.   Wixon, B.G., et al.   An Interdisciplinary Investigation of Envi-
     ronmental Pollution by Lead and Other Heavy Metals From Industrial
     Development in the New Lead Belt of Southeastern Missouri.
     University of Missouri, Rolla and Columbia, Missouri.  June 1974.

8.   Hallowell, J.B., et al.  Water Pollution Control in the Primary
     Nonferrous Metals Industry - Volume I.   Copper, Zinc, and Lead
     Industries.   Environmental Protection Agency.  Washington, D.C.
     EPA-R2-73-274a.
                               15

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 PRIMARY  LEAD  PRODUCTION                                      PROCESS  NO.  2

                                 Concentrating

 !•    Function - Concentrating  is  the process whereby the  lead-containing
 portions  of the ore produced by  the mine are isolated  from the  fractions low
 in desirable mineral content.  Except  for  high-grade galena  ore produced in
 southeastern Missouri, ore concentration is required to produce feed mate-
 rial ^suitable for subsequent metal recovery processes.  The  process  consists
 of milling the ore by crushing and grinding, followed  by  separation  into two
 or more  fractions.  The  fractions rich  in  desired minerals are  called con-
 centrates, and the fraction^ low  in mineral content are called  gangue.

     Reparation is achieved by gravity  and froth flotation methods.  The
 gravity method achieves  separation because of differences in specific
 gravity of the lead-rich minerals and the  gangue particles.  The flotation
 method achieves separation by the use of compressed air and  chemical addi-
 tives that create a froth in which finely  divided mineral particles  are
 floated from the gangue.   In some applications, the flotation method serves
 as a  supplement to gravity separation to improve the concentrate.

      Lead producers of the Mississippi  Valley and the  eastern United States
 use^gravity separation because there are considerable  differences in spe-
 cific gravities of the ore minerals and the gangue.   Since the milled ore
 particles need not be as small  as those required for flotation, the  milling
 costs are lower.   Two modes of gravity  separation are  commonly used, jigging
 and float-sink.   In jigging, the crushed ore particles are fed to an agi-
 tated, water-filled jigging chamber, where the heavier ore particles gravi-
 tate  to the bottom and the lighter gangue  is displaced to the top and
 removed.  ^ The float-sink mode utilizes  a liquid medium, such as an aqueous
 ferrosilicon suspension,  with a specific gravity between that of the lead
 mineral and the gangue.   The mineral particles sink, while the gangue floats
 to the top for removal  by skimming.

      Flotation is practiced chiefly by  lead mines in the western United
 States.   The concentrate recovered from the flotation  cells contains 45  to
 78 percent lead,  the percentage depending on the type  and grade of crude ore
 and its susceptibility to flotation.   The concentrate  also contains  varying
 amounts of other valuable elements.

     Ore concentrate from the flotation cells  requires dewatering  before
 shipment to smelters.   The slurry is fed to thickeners, and flocculating
agents such as alum are  added to improve the settling  rate and fines collec-
tion.   The thickened slurry of  about 50 percent solids is vacuum-filtered
and dried to a product  containing 6  to 15 percent moisture (1).

     Typical  analyses  of  southeastern  Missouri  and western lead ore concen-
trates are presented in  Tables  7 and 8,  respectively.
                                     16

-------
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rH rH
O
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0
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O
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UD
O
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                  17

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         TABLE 8.  WESTERN LEAD CONCENTRATE ANALYSES (4)
Constituent
Pb
Zn
Au
Ag
Cu
As
Percent
45-60
0-15
0-0.05 kg/ ton
0-1.4 kg/ton
0-3
0.01-0.40
Constituent
Sb
Fe
insolubles
CaO
S
Bi
Percent, weight9
0.01-2.0
1.0-8.0
0.5-4.0
tr-3.0
10-30
tr-0.1
tr = trace,
                               18

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2.   Input Materials - Lead content of the sulfide ores fed to concentrating
plants ranges from 3 to 8 percent, except for the high-grade Missouri ores
in which lead content exceeds 70 percent (2).

     Table 9 lists the flotation chemicals and amounts required for process-
ing lead ore; included also are some of the less commonly used agents.

3.   Operating Conditions - All concentrating operations take place at
atmospheric pressure and ambient temperatures.

4.   Utilities - Water usage varies with the degree of processing and is
approximately 4 cubic meters per metric ton of ore processed (3).

     Electricity is used to operate grinding equipment and generate com-
pressed air.

5.   Waste Streams - Fugitive dust emissions are the only type of atmo-
spheric pollutant warranting consideration.  Compositions of the dust are
not specified.   Crushing operations generate, on the average, 3.2 kilograms
of particulate emissions per metric ton of ore processed; 0.9 kilogram is
attributable to the crushing and grinding operations, and 2.3 kilograms to
material transport and storage (3,4,5).

     Liquid waste from the concentrating operation is in the form of a
tailings slurry discharged to the tailings pond.  Approximately 4 cubic
meters of tailings slurry is discharged per metric ton of ore processed
(3,6).

     Flotation and conditioning chemicals are present in the wastewater
either as a floating layer or a solute.  In general, lead sulfide flotation
is run at an elevated pH level (8.5 to 11) requiring frequent pH adjustments
with hydrated lime or sodium carbonate (7).  This alkaline wastewater dis-
solves only small amounts of heavy metals, but can carry mineral particles
in suspension.

     Wastewaters leaving a concentrating operation contained metals as shown
in Table 10.  These were the only metals investigated; others may have been
present in greater than normal concentrations.  Concentrations of calcium,
magnesium, sodium, and potassium in mill waters are significantly higher
than those in surface water.

     Water content of the gangue material from flotation is adjusted to
facilitate hydraulic transport to a tailings pond.   Tailings contain
residual solids from the ore, dissolved solids, and excess mill reagents.
Typical quantities are 0.9 to 1.1 tons per ton of ore milled.  The main
component is dolomite, with small quantities of such constituents as lead,
zinc,  copper, mercury, cadmium, manganese, chromium, and iron.

6.   Control Technology - Dust from the crushing operations is generally
reduced by drawing air "through the equipment and collecting the dust with
cyclone separators.   This is both a dust control and an integral part of the
process since it allows these small particles to bypass one or more crushing

                                     19

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                   TABLE 9.  FLOTATION CHEMICALS  (8)
      Chemical
    Amount used,
kg/metric ton of ore
 Na^CO^ (conditioner)
 CaO (conditioner)
 CuS04 (activator)
 Sodium isopropol  xanthate (collector)
 Pine oil  (frothers)
 NaCN (depressant)
     0.45 - 0.9
      0.9 - 18.
     0.36 - 0.55
   0.0045 - 0.09
         0.09
    0.045 - 0.14
 LESS  COMMON  FLOTATION  REAGENTS
      Reagent
      Purpose
Methyl  isobutyl-carbinol
Propylene glycol methyl ether
Long-chain aliphatic alcohols
Potassium amyl xanthate
Dixanthogen
Isopropyl ethyl thionocarbonate
Sodium diethyl-dithiophosphate
Zinc sulfate
Sodium dichromate
Sulfur dioxide
Starch
     Frother
     Frother
     Frother
     Collector
     Collector
     Collectors
     Collectors
     Zinc depressant
     Lead depressant
     Lead depressant
     Lead depressant
                                 20

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  TABLE  10.  LEAD MILL WASTEWATER ANALYSIS  (6)
Component
Concentration, mg/1
Mercury



Lead



Zinc



Copper



Cadmium



Chromium



Manganese



Iron
     <0.001



   0.107 to 1.9




    0.12 to 0.46




   0.014 to 0.36




   0.005 to 0.011



   0.002 to 0.02




    0.03 to 0.169




    0.03 to 0.53
                   21

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and grinding operations.  Fugitive dust is usually uncontrolled unless the
amount being lost economically justifies the installation of equipment for
its recovery.

     To preserve the Ozark area of Missouri where the New Lead Belt is
located, special attention has been given to wastewater treatment.  Flota-
tion reagents in the wastewater are biologically degraded by algae growth.
Use of meandering streams before final discharge to receiving waters in-
creases exposure to the algae and provides good conditions for algae growth.
The algae sink to the bottom of the stream and act as a solids collector, as
well (6).   Disposal of algae in event of excessive growth is not discussed
in the literature.

7.   EPA Source Classification Code - 3-03-010-04

8.   References -

     1.    Development Document for Interim Final Effluent Limitations Guide-
          lines and Proposed New Source Performance Standards for the Lead
          Segment of the Nonferrous Metals Manufacturing Point Source Cate-
          gory.   Environmental  Protection Agency.   EPA-440/l-75/032-a.
          February 1975.

     2.    Mineral Facts and Problems.   U.S.  Department of the Interior,
          Bureau of Mines.   Washington, D.C.   1970.

     3.    Development Document for Interim Final and Proposed Effluent
          Limitations Guidelines and New Source Performance Standards for
          the Ore Mining and Dressing Industry.   Point Source Category
          Volumes I and II.   Environmental  Protection Agency.   Washington,
          D.C.   EPA-1-75/032-6.   February 1975.

     4.    PEDCo-Environmental  Specialists,  Inc.   Trace Pollutant Emissions
          from the  Processing of Metallic Ores.   August 1974.

     5.    Jones,  H.R.   Pollution Control  in the Nonferrous Metals  Industry.
          Noyes  Data Corporation.   Park Ridge,  New Jersey.   1972.

     6.    Wixon,  B.C.,  et al.   An Interdisciplinary Investigation  of Envi-
          ronmental  Pollution  by Lead  and Other Heavy Metals  from  Industrial
          Development in the New Lead  Belt  of Southeastern Missouri.
          University of Missouri.   Rolla  and  Columbia,  Missouri.   June  1974.

     7.    Hawley, J.R.   The  Use,  Characteristics and Toxicity  of Mine-Mill
          Reagents  in the Province  of  Ontario.   Ontario Ministry of the
          Environment.   Toronto.   1977.

     8.    Encyclopedia  of Chemical  Technology.   Interscience  Publishers,  a
          division  of John Wiley and Sons,  Inc.   New York.  1967.
                                    22

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PRIMARY LEAD PRODUCTION                                     PROCESS NO. 3

                                  Sintering

1.   Function - The ore concentrate is treated by sintering to make it
suitable for subsequent blast furnace operation.   Sintering is the roasting
of blended and pelletized ore concentrate mixtures.   The purposes of sinter-
ing are as follows:

     1)   To provide a feed of proper ratio of lead, silica, sulfur, and
          iron for smelting;

     2)   To convert metallic oxides into oxides or sulfates amenable to
          smelting;

     3)   To drive off volatile oxides such as S02,  S03, As203, and Sb203;
          and

     4)   To produce a firm, porous clinker that is easily fed to a blast
          furnace (1).

     The process consists of three consecutive steps:

     1)   Blending of ore concentrates with direct-smelting ores, sinter
          recycle, flue dust, and fluxes;

     2)   Pelletization of the blended mixture; and

     3)   Roasting of pelleted material.

     Blending balances the smelter charge and permits control  of impurity
levels of zinc, copper,, arsenic, antimony, and bismuth.  Pelletizing is
achieved by mixing the blended charge with 6 to 8 percent by weight water in
a pug mill and feeding the mix to a rotating pelletizing drum.   Resulting
pellets are 3 to 5 millimeters in diameter.

     The pellets are spread evenly over a horizontal metal belt which takes
them through an updraft sintering machine.  The only remaining downdraft
sintering machine was scheduled for replacement early in 1979.   As the
pellets proceed through the sintering machine, they are heated and undergo
oxidizing reactions that convert sulfides to oxides and sulfates.  Lead
silicate forms, and oxides combine to form low-melting-point silicate com-
plexes, which bind the ore particles together.

     The resulting sinter is broken into  pieces ranging up to  25 millimeters
diameter (2).   The crushed sinter is screened for removal of fines, which
are recycled to the charge blending step.  The screened product is stored
for blast furnace reduction.  Table 11 gives typical ranges of components in
the sintered product.
                                     23

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TABLE 11.   SINTER ANALYSIS (1,3,4)
Component
Ag
Cu
Pb
S
Fe
Si02
CaO
Zn
Sb
Cd
Weight,
percent
0.03-0.07
0.3-4.5
28-50.0
0.75-2.0
12-15.5
10.0-15.6
9.0-10.5
4.0-12.5
0.01-1.5
Tr-0.04
             24

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2.    Input Material  - Lead concentrates are the main input material for
sintering.   Typical  analyses of western and Missouri lead concentrates are
presented in the concentrating process description (Process No.  2).  Col-
lected flue dusts, recycled sinter, and smelter residues also are part of
the charge for sintering.   Sulfide-free fluxes are added to maintain a
specified sulfur content (5 to 7 percent by weight) in the charge.   Silica
and limestone are used as needed.   Coke fines, in the amount of I percent by
weight of the total  charge, are mixed with the charge (5).

    Typical feed sources to a sinter machine are presented in Table 12.


                     TABLE 12.  SINTER MACHINE FEED (10)

Ore concentrate
Misc. lead materials
Flux diluent
Sinter recycle
Weight, percent
31.47
12.44
19.86
36.20
3.   Operating Conditions - Temperatures in both updraft and downdraft
sinter roasting machines reach approximately 800°C.  Pressure is atmo-
spheric.

4.   UtilIities - In updraft sintering machines gas- or oil-fired burners are
used to  ignite the charge.  Energy consumed in the sintering process amounts
to 0.5 million kilocalories per ton of lead produced.  A breakdown allocates
40 percent to coke consumption and 60 percent to gas or oil consumption, gas
being used more than oil (6).

     Water may be added for pelletizing the charge if the moisture content
is below required limits.  Air is injected through the charge while oxidiz-
ing in the sintering machines.  No quantities are given for air injection.

     Electricity is the power source for fans, feed conveyors, and general
operating equipment.  Approximately 20 percent less power is required for
the updraft fans than for downdraft (7).

5.   Waste Streams - Particulate emissions are approximately 100 to 250
kilograms per metric ton of lead produced in sinter machines (9).  Analysis
of the flue dust shows roughly 40 to 70 percent lead, 10 to 20 percent zinc,
and 8 to 12 percent sulfur (8).  Depending upon concentrate composition, the
flue dust contains various amounts of antimony, cadmium, germanium, sele-
nium, tellurium, indium, thallium, chlorine, fluorine, and arsenic (7).
Tables 13 and 14 give weight analysis and size distribution of particulate
emissions.
                                     25

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TABLE 13.  GRAIN LOADING AND WEIGHT ANALYSIS OF INPUT FEED AND
       EMISSIONS UPDRAFT LEAD SINTERING MACHINE (11)
Grain
loading, g/Nm3 (0°C)
16.3











Weight
Pb
Si02
Fe
CaO
MgO
Zn
S
Cu
As
Cd
Se
inerts
analysis, %
35-50
8-11
9-13
7-10
0.7-1
4-6
0.7-1
tr
tr-30
tr
tr
6-8
       TABLE 14.    TYPICAL  SIZE  PROFILE OF EMISSIONS
            UPDRAFT LEAD SINTERING  MACHINE (11)
Size,
micron
20-40
10-20
5-10
< 5
% weight
15-45
9-30
4-19
1-10
                            26

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     Sintering is the only step in the lead smelting process that emits
enough S02 to create a serious air pollution control problem.  About 85
percent of the sulfur is removed from the concentrate during sintering.
Approximately 50 percent of the remainder is discharged as S02 from subse-
quent operations; the balance goes into the slag as sulfates (7,9).

     In the sintering process most of the sulfur is eliminated at the front
end of the conveyor.  By the time the charge reaches the end of the machine,
little S02 is being emitted.  If the exit gases are removed in a single
stream, the S02 concentration is about 2 percent (7,8).  In an updraft
machine, the exit gases can be split into two streams, one predominantly
from the front and the other from the rear.   This procedure produces both a
weak and a strong S02 stream, 0.5 and 5.7 percent S02 respectively (7).

     Off-gases also contain organic vapors from flotation reagents or their
combustion products.  The compounds formed from these flotation chemicals by
reactions caused by the sintering temperatures are not known.  Traces of HF
and SiF4 may be found in these gases.   The volume of gases emitted is a
function of machine size and material  throughput and ranges from 0.25 to
0.50 normal cubic meters per minute per square meter of bed area (8).
Temperatures of the gases normally range from 150° to 400°C (5,8).  Flow
rates may vary between 58,000 and 66,000 standard cubic meters per hour (8).

     Table 15 gives a typical analysis of gases from a sintering machine.  A
small but variable amount of arsenic trioxide in the gaseous form may also be
present.

6-   Control  Technology - Particulates from the sinter machine are collected
by several  different methods.  Table 16 lists current atmospheric controls on
lead sintering processes.   Efficiencies range from 95 to 99.8 percent.

     The strong gas stream collected from separation of updraft exit gases
is the only stream amenable to sulfuric acid production.  In both the weak
stream and the combined single stream, concentrations are too low for such
treatment.   At least one smelter has installed a recirculation system for
the weak stream, which allows S02 to be removed in the strong stream exit
for subsequent treatment.   Certain foreign operations have successfully made
use of this technique for some time.

     Three plants are now controlling S02 in sinter machine off-gases by use
of single-contact sulfuric acid plants, which reduce total S02 emissions by
70 to 80 percent.  Another plant is planning to add an acid plant to its new
updraft machine.

     Currently no lead smelters practice control on weak S02 streams.  The
best available control technology for these streams would be chemical scrub-
bing.
                                    27

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TABLE 15.  ANALYSIS OF SINTER MACHINE EXHAUST GASES
      (MISSOURI LEAD OPERATING COMPANY) (12)

so2
°2
co2
N2
so3
Dust content
Temperature
Moisture content
Range, % by volume
4-7
4-9
3-4
84-85
0.05-0.2
57 g/Nm3
200-350°C
25 percent by vol .
                     28

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         TABLE 16.
          Plant
          Control system
Bunker Hill/Kellogg, Idaho
AMAX/Boss, Missouri
St. Joe/Herculaneum, Missouri
ASARCO/E. Helena, Montana
ASARCO/Glover, Missouri
ASARCO/E1 Paso, Texas
Updraft sintering machine produces
two gas streams:  strong gas stream
to acid plant.  Weak gas stream com-
bined with blast furnace and hygiene
air, then goes to a baghouse and out
the stack.

Updraft sintering machine produces
two gas streams:  strong gas stream
to acid plant.  Weak gas stream com-
bined with blast furnace gas before
discharge through stack.

Updraft sintering machine produces
two gas streams:  strong gas stream
to acid plant.  Weak gas stream joins
other gases, then thru baghouses
and to stack.

Updraft sintering machine.  Gases to
water spray, ESP, then dilution air
added and released to stack.

Updraft sintering machine.  All gases
to water spray and baghouse, then
out stack.

Updraft sintering machine.  A new con-
trol  system is planned, making use of
an acid plant for the strong stream.
                                  29

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7.   EPA Classification Code - 3-03-010-01.

8.   References -

     1.    Development Document for Interim Final Effluent Limitations Guide-
          lines and Proposed New Source Performance Standards for the Lead
          Segment of the Nonferrous Metals Manufacturing Point Source Cate-
          gory.  Environmental Protection Agency.  EPA-440/l-75/032-a.
          February 1975.

     2.    Davis, W.E.   National Inventory of Sources and Emissions:   Copper,
          Selenium, and Zinc.   U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (NTIS),
          Research Triangle Park,  North Carolina.  PB-210 679, PB-210 678
          and PB-210 677.   May 1972.

     3.    Encyclopedia of Chemical  Technology.   Interscience Publishers, a
          division of John Wiley and Sons, Inc.   New York.   1967.

     4.    Hallowell, J.B., R.H. Cherry, Jr.,  and G.R.  Smithson,  Jr.   Trace
          Metals in Effluents  from  Metallurgical Operations.   In:  Cycling
          and Control  of Metals.   U.S.  Environmental  Protection  Agency.
          Cincinnati,  Ohio.   November 1972.   pp. 75-81.

     5.    Fejer, M.E.,  and D.H. Larson.  Study of Industrial  Uses of Energy
          Relative to  Environmental Effects.   U.S.  Environmental  Protection
          Agency.   Research Triangle  Park, North Carolina.   July 1974.

     6.    Copper Hydrometallurgy:   The  Third-Generation  Plants.   Engineering
          and Mining Journal.   June 1975.

     7.    Background Information  for  New Source  Performance  Standards:
          Primary  Copper,  Zinc, and Lead Smelters.   Volume  I,  Proposed
          Standards.   Environment Protection  Agency.   Research Triangle
          Park,  North  Carolina.   EPA-450/2-74-002a.  October  1974.

     8.    Jones, H.R.   Pollution Control  in the  Nonferrous Metals Industry
          Noyes  Data Corporation.   Park Ridge, New  Jersey.  1972.

     9.    Calspan  Corporation.  Assessment of Industrial  Waste Practices in
          the  Metal  Smelting and Refining  Industry.  Volume II -  Primary and
          Secondary Nonferrous  Smelting and Refining.  Draft.  April  1975.

     10.   Arthur G.  McKee  & Co.  Systems Study for  Control of  Emissions
          Primary  Nonferrous Smelting Industry.   U.S.  Department  of  Health,
          Education, and Welfare.   June 1969.
                                    30

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PRIMARY PRODUCTION                                          PROCESS NO. 4

                         Contact Sulfuric Acid Plant

!•   Function - An acid plant catalytically oxidizes S02 gas to sulfur
trioxide, and absorbs it in water to form sulfuric acid.  The sintering
machine produces the only lead smelter exit gases that are amenable to
production of sulfuric acid.

     Contact sulfuric acid plants are continuous steady-state processing
units that are operated in other industries using S02 made by burning
elemental sulfur.  They may be used with waste S02 streams if the gas is
sufficiently concentrated, is supplied at a reasonably uniform rate, and is
free from impurities.

     The heart of a sulfuric acid plant is a fixed bed of vanadium pentoxide
or other special catalyst which oxidizes the S02.  All other components of
the plant are auxiliary to this catalytic converter.  The other components
clean and dry the stream of gas, mix the proper amount of oxygen with it
(unless sufficient oxygen is present), preheat the gas to reaction tempera-
ture, and remove the heat produced by the oxidation.

     The plant incorporates one or two absorbers to contact the gas with
water to form the acid.   If only one absorber is provided, this is described
as a single-contact sulfuric acid plant.  If two are provided, the second is
placed between stages of the converter, and this is a double-contact plant.
The second absorber allows a larger proportion of the S02 to be converted
into acid, and thus removes more S02 from the gas stream if the initial
concentration is high.

2.   Input Materials - Most contact sulfuric acid plants operate most ef-
ficiently with a constant gas stream that contains 12 to 15 percent S02.
Performance almost as good can be achieved in plants that are designed for 7
to 10 percent S02 content.   The ability of a plant to convert most of the
S02 to sulfuric acid declines either as gas streams become weaker in S02 or
as the flow rate or concentration becomes less consistent.  A concentration
lower than 4 percent S02 is extremely inefficient, since sufficient catalyst
temperature cannot be maintained (1).   Certain modifications of the process,
which add heat by combustion of fuel,  can provide better conversion at low
S02 concentrations.

     The gas that enters the catalyst bed must be cleaned of all  particulate
matter, be almost completely dried,  and contain no gases or fumes that act
as poisons to the catalyst.   The acid plant is always supplied with special
scrubbers to remove final  traces of objectionable materials.

     Clean water is required to react with the S03 to form sulfuric acid.
It may be necessary to deionize the water in a special ion exchange system
in order to avoid excessive corrosion or to meet acid quality specifica-
tions.   Steam condensate may also be used.
                                     31

-------
 3.    Operating Conditions  -  The catalyst bed operates properly only if
 temperatures  are maintained  between 450° and 475°C.   Pressures do not
 usually exceed 2 kilograms per square centimeter.   The plants  are usually
 not enclosed  in a building.

 4.    Utilities - Noncontact  cooling water is required.   At one plant pro-
 ducing 1500 metric tons  of acid per day, about 12  million  liters  of water is
 required each day (2).

      A small  amount of electricity  is required for pumps and blowers.   This
 may be generated on site in  some cases,  where recovery of  waste heat is
 maximized.

      In certain patented modifications,  heat from  combustion of natural  gas
 is  used to  provide better  efficiency at  low  S02  concentrations.   Natural  gas
 or  oil  is also required  to heat any acid plant to  operating temperature
 following a shutdown.

 5.    Waste  Streams -  Single-contact sulfuric acid  plants using weak gas
 streams can at best absorb only 96  to 98 percent of the  S02 fed to  them.
 The remaining quantity passes  through to the atmosphere.   Efficiencies  as
 low as  60 percent have been  reported (3).

      Double-contact acid plants  provide  a  higher percentage of S02  removal
 if  they are fed gas with a higher S02  content.   Efficiencies higher than  99
 percent have  been reported.  Exit gas  S02  concentration  is  still  usually
 within  the  same range as shown  above,  although  one  recently developed
 process claims  stack  emissions  of less than  0.005  percent  S02  (4).

      In sulfuric  acid plants,  it  is  difficult  to prevent some  loss  of S03,
 in  the  form of  a  fine mist of  sulfuric acid, with  the  absorber exit gases.
 This  is usually 0.02  to  0.04 kilogram  of S03 per metric  ton of 100  percent
 acid  produced.

      The scrubbing  columns that  clean  the waste gas stream create off-grade
 weak  acid that  cannot be sold.    The  amount is  estimated  as 4 to 8 liters  for
 each  10 cubic meters of  gas treated  (5).

      In  this  industry, most particulate  matter from gas  cleaning equipment
 is  recycled to  the  metallurgical processes.  The small quantities of partic-
 ulate removed by  the acid  scrubbing  operations, however, are mixed  with a
 stream  of weak  sulfuric  acid and cannot  readily be recycled.   They  are
 discharged with the acid plant blowdown.

      In  some  sections of the  country it  is difficult to  sell the product
 acid, even  for  less than the  cost of manufacture.  Therefore,   it may be less
 expensive to  neutralize and discard the acid than to absorb the costs of
 shipment to a distant user.  Thus, the product acid can  itself  become a
waste stream.

     An acid plant does not produce solid wastes directly,  but  the gypsum
 formed  in neutralization  of acid can constitute a significant  solid waste.


                                     32

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6.    Control Technology - In this country the S02 in the tail gas from the
sulfunc acid plant is not controlled.   When S02 emissions are large, the
best control may be to increase operating efficiency by adding additional
catalyst stages or by adding heating equipment to maintain proper catalyst
temperature.  Changes in the metallurgical operations to produce a stream of
higher S02 concentration at a more uniform rate are also good controls, if
this is possible.   Scrubbing of the weak S02 stream for final S02 absorption
may also be necessary.

     Mist eliminators in the form of packed columns or impingement metal
screens can minimize acid mist emissions.  Manufacturers claim elimination
of all but 35 to 70'milligrams of mist per cubic meter of gas, and the units
at times perform better.  To prevent formation of plumes of mist during
periods of abnormal operations, however, electrostatic precipitators are
often used.  Better regulation of feed rate and quality also minimizes acid
loss.

     Tables 17 and 18 give the treatments now practiced at lead smelters for
the control of acid plant blowdown and scrubber water (1).

     If volumes of strong acid must be neutralized, treatment with limestone
is followed by more precise pH adjustment with lime, and discharge to a pond
for in-perpetuity storage of the resulting gypsum is the only tested and
economical method of disposal.

7.    EPA Source Classification Code - None

8.    References -

     1.   Jones, H.R.  Pollution Control  in the Nonferrous Metals Industry.
          Noyes Data Corporation.  Park  Ridge, New Jersey.  1972.

     2.   Hallowell, J.B., et al.  Water  Pollution Control in the Primary
          Nonferrous Metals Industry - Volume I.  Copper, Zinc, and  Lead
          Industries.  EPA-R2-73-274a.   U.S. Environmental Protection
          Agency.  Washington, D.C.  September 1973.

     3.   Confidential information from  EPA.

     4.   Browder, T.J.  Advancements and Improvements in the Sulfuric Acid
          Industry.  Tim J. Browder Co.   San Marino, California.

     5.   Vandergrift, A.E.,  L.J. Shannon, P.G. Gormena, E.W. Lawless, E.E.
          Sal lee, and M. Reichel.  Particulate Pollutant System Study - Mass
          Emissions, Volumes  1, 2, and 3.  PB-203 128, PB-203 522, and
          PB-203 521.  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.  Durham, North
          Carolina.  May 1971.

     6.   Development Document for Interim Final Effluent Limitations Guide-
          lines and Proposed  New Source  Performance Standards for the  Lead
          Segment of the Nonferrous Metals Manufacturing Point Source Cate-
          gory.  Environmental Protection Agency.  EPA-440/l-75/032-a.
          February 1975.

                                     33

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   TABLE  17.  WASTEWATER TREATMENT AT PRIMARY LEAD ACID PLANTS  (6)
Plant
Liquid effluent treatment
                                                       Discharge
               Enters water treatment plant,
               limed, thickened, and filtered,
               and sent to reservoir for
               recycle.

               Recycled to slag granulation.

               Enters liming sump, then
               passed to lime bed, then
               to a cool ing pond.
                                            0
                                            0
                                        273  nT/day
TABLE 18.  SCRUBBER WASTEWATER TREATMENT AT PRIMARY LEAD PLANTS (6)
Plant
           Treatment
                                                       Discharge
                    Enters water treatment plant,
                    limed, thickened,  filtered,
                    and then sent to reservoir for
                    recycling.

                    Recycled from a  cooling tower.

                    Sent to a lime sump  then
                    to  a settling pit.   Most
                    is  recycled.
                                           0
                                      Undetermined
                              34

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PRIMARY LEAD PRODUCTION                                     PROCESS NO.  5

                                Blast Furnace

1.    Function - Sintered feed is reduced in the blast furnace to produce a
crude lead bullion.   Specified amounts of coke, limestone, and other fluxing
materials are charged with the sinter through a water-jacketed shaft at the
top of the furnace.   The material settles to the furnace bottom, which is
supported by a heavy refractory material.

     Air is injected into the charge through side-mounted tuyeres to effect
a more complete formation of metallic oxides and thereby raise the tempera-
ture of the charge.   At the operating temperature of the furnace, coke and
resulting carbon monoxide reduce most of the metallic oxides to yield a
molten mass of metal.  Some of the metallic impurities interact with the
flux to form a slag composed mainly of iron and calcium silicates.  Depend-
ing upon the composition of the charge, material in the blast furnace can
separate into as many as four distinct liquid layers.

     Copper, if present in lead ores, reacts with residual sulfur to form a
matte that separates into a layer beneath the slag.  The matte typically
assays 44 to 62 weight percent copper, 10 to 20 percent lead, and up to 13
percent sulfur (1).   If the charge is high in arsenic and/or antimony con-
tent, a speiss layer will form under the matte.  Speiss compounds are
arsenides and antimonides of iron and other metals.  The bottom layer of
lead bullion is 94 to 98 weight percent lead plus varying amounts of other
metals such as copper, tin, arsenic, antimony, silver, and gold.  Typical
ranges of composition are shown in Table 19.

     Upon completion of the process, the crude bullion is charged to dross-
ing kettles (2), the matte and speiss are sold to a copper smelter, and the
slag is discharged to a fuming furnace.  A typical  slag analysis is shown in
Table 20.

     The capacity of most large blast furnaces is 1360 metric tons of charge
materials per day.

2.    Input Materials - The blast furnace charge is  made up of sinter,
fluxes, coke, and sundry materials recycled from other smelting operations.
The relative amounts of these materials are presented in Table 21.

     Normally, coke comprises 8 to 15 weight percent of the furnace charge.
If the blast air is enriched with oxygen, coke consumption is reduced 10
percent with a 10 to 20 percent increase in smelting rate.

3.    Operating Conditions - Temperatures in a blast furnace range from 215°C
for the charge near the top of the furnace to 1220°C in the slag zone.  Slag
temperatures range from 1000° to 1220°C, and bullion temperatures from 900°
to 950°C.

     Because of the exhaust gas configuration, the  blast furnace operates at
a pressure slightly above atmospheric.


                                     35

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   TABLE 19.  LEAD BULLION COMPOSITION (2,3,4)
Component
Ag
An
Cu
c
o
Pb
Fe
Zn
Sn
As
Sb
Bi
Wt. percent
0.13-0.31
1.6-3.13
1.0-2.5

0.25
94-98
0.6-0.8
tr.
tr.
0.7-1.1
1.0-1.75
0.01-0.03
Value for Au in g/metric ton.
tr.  - trace
                  36

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TABLE 20.  TYPICAL BLAST FURNACE SLAG ANALYSIS (2,3,4)
Component
Ag
Cu
Pb
FeO
CaO
Zn
insol
MnO
As
Sb
Cd
F
Cl
Ge
S
Weight percent
1.56-4.693
0.10b
1.5-3.5
25.5-31.9
14.3-17.5
13.0-17.5
22. 6-26. 5d
2.0-4.5
0.10
0.10
0.10
trc
trc
trc
0.5-1.0
a Values for Ag in grams per metric ton.
Variable, depending on the furnace charge.
c tr = trace.
Insolubles include MgO - A10 - Si02 phases.
                         37

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TABLE 21.  TYPICAL BLAST FURNACE CHARGE (2)
Component
Sinter
Coke
Miscellaneous products
(zinc plant residues)
Slag (dross)
Silica
Lime rock
Cadmium residue
Refinery dross
Baghouse product
Weight, kg
1250-1650
125-165
0-90
0-225
0-36
0-27
0-9
0-35
0-35
                  38

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4.   Utilities - Air is injected into the charge at a pressure of 0.1 to 0.3
kilogram per square centimeter (2).  Consumption of 140 to 175 cubic meters
per hour is required for a charge of 1360 metric tons per day (2).

     Cooling water circulates through jacketed shafts to control furnace
temperatures.   Quantities are unreported.

5.   Waste Streams - Participate emission rates in blast furnace exhaust gas
range from 125 to 180 kilograms per metric ton of bullion produced (3,5).
Particle sizes of the dust range from 0.03 to 0.3 micron (5).  The dust is
composed of oxides, sulfates, and sulfides of the various metals present in
the furnace charge, plus chlorides, fluorides, and coke dust (5,6).

     Undiluted gas temperatures are estimated to be 650° to 750°C (3,5),
with theoretical flue gas rates of 170 to 400 normal cubic meters per
minute.   After dilution by air and water vapor, however, volume typically
increases from 9 to 12 times the theoretical flow (1).

     Exhaust gas analysis after- air dilution and CO combustion is reported
in Table 22.
                    TABLE 22.  EXHAUST GAS ANALYSIS AFTER
                    AIR DILUTION AND CO COMBUSTION (5,7)
Component
C02
02
C0a
S02
N2
Percent by volume
15
15
5
0.05
Remainder
                 CO concentration estimated to be 25 to 50
                 volume percent prior to combustion.


     Other reports indicate that CO and S02 concentrations, although highly
variable, average 2.0 and 0.01 to 0.25 volume percent, respectively (1,5).
An estimated 10 to 20 weight percent of total sulfur in the feed concentrate
is removed in the blast furnace, half emitted as S02 and the rest retained
in the slag or matte (8).

     Slag from the blast furnace is generally discharged and granulated
with cool ing water.
                                     39

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6.   Control Technology - The dilute S02 emissions from the blast furnace
are not controlled at lead smelters.  The best available control technology
is chemical scrubbing.

     Particulates in blast furnace exhaust gases are controlled at all
smelters by means of baghouses.   Control efficiency ranges from 95 to 99.9
percent.  Table 23 describes controls for blast furnace gases.

     Current practice for slag disposal is to convey it hydraulically with
the granulating water stream to a dump or tailings pond.  Recommended tech-
nology includes use of concrete settling pits, ground sealing of disposal
area, and diversion of runoff to a water treatment lagoon.

7.   EPA Classification Code - 3-03-010-02

8.   References -
               t
     1.    Arthur G.  McKee & Co.   Systems Study for Control  Emissions Primary
          Nonferrous Smelting Industry.   U.S.  Department of Health, Educa-
          tion, and Welfare.   June 1969.

     2.    PEDCo-Environmental, Specialists,  Inc.   Trace Pollutant Emissions
          from the Processing of Metallic Ores.   August 1974.

     3.    Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology.  Interscience Publishers, a
          division of John Wiley and Sons,  Inc.   New York.   1967.

     4.    Development Document for Interim Final  Effluent Limitations Guide-
          lines and Proposed New Source Performance Standards  for the Lead
          Segment of the Nonferrous Metals  Manufacturing Point Source
          Category.   Environmental Protection Agency.   EPA-440/l-75/032-a.
          February 1975.

     5.    Jones,  H.R.   Pollution Control  in  the  Nonferrous  Metals Industry.
          Noyes Data Corporation.   Park Ridge, New Jersey.   1972.

     6.    Phillips,  A.J.   The World's Most  Complex Metallurgy  (Copper,  Lead,
          and  Zinc).   Transactions of the Metallurgical  Society of AIME
          Volume  224.   August 1962.   pp.  657-668.

     7.    Arthur  G.  McKee  & Co.   Systems  Study for Control  of  Emissions
          Primary Nonferrous  Smelting Industry.   U.S.  Department of Health
          Education,  and Welfare.   June  1969.

     8.    Background Information for New  Source  Performance  Standards:
          Primary Copper,  Zinc,  and Lead  Smelters.   Volume  I   Proposed
          Standards.   Environmental  Protection Agency,  Research Triangle
          Park, North  Carolina.   EPA-450/2-74-002a.  October 1974
                                    40

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            TABLE 23.  ATMOSPHERIC CONTROL SYSTEMS ON PRIMARY
                         LEAD BLAST FURNACES (7)
     Plant
          Control system
Bunker Hill/Kellogg, Idaho
AMAX/Boss, Missouri
St. Joe/Herculaneum, Missouri
ASARCO/E. Helena, Montana
ASARCO/Glover, Missouri
ASARCO/E1 Paso, Texas
Blast furnace gas stream joined
to weak sinter gas stream and
hygiene air, then to baghouse
then to stack.

Blast furnace gases join sinter
weak gases, then to baghouse,
and then out the stack.

Blast furnace gases join sinter
weak gases and other gases pass
thru baghouses and stack.

Blast furnace gases join reverb
and ventilation gases, then pass
thru three baghouses in parallel
with stack for each house.

Blast furnace gases to water
spray, baghouse, and three
stacks.

Blast furnace and dross furnace
gases mix, then pass thru a
spray chamber and a baghouse,
then out six stacks.
                                   41

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 PRIMARY LEAD PRODUCTION                                     PROCESS NO.  6

                              Slag Fuming Furnace

1.   Function - A slag fuming furnace is used to recover metal values other-
wise lost in the slag.  Blast furnace slag contains appreciable concentra-
tions of lead and zinc oxides created through reoxidation of the metals in
the bottom portion of the blast furnace.

     The slag is fed to the fume furnace in the molten state, and pulverized
coal is used with a stream of primary combustion air to supply heat and to
maintain a reducing environment.  The metallic oxides are first converted to
metals, then are reoxidized with a stream of secondary air added above the
slag surface.  Lead and zinc are discharged from the slag fuming furnace as
finely divided participates entrained in the furnace gases.

      A matte is  sometimes  separated  from the  slag  in  this operation  for
 recovery  of  substantial  amounts of copper and  silver  from the  dezinced  slag
 When  fuming  has  subsided,  the  slag is dumped  and cooled  with water.

 2.    Input Materials  -  Composition of the blast  furnace  slag charged  to the
 fume  furnace is  shown  in Table  20 of Process  No. 5.   Two tons  of  slag are
 generated per  ton  of  crude  lead bullion  produced by the  blast  furnace.
 Pulverized coal  is  added to  maintain temperature by combustion.   The  amount
 is  not specified  in the  literature.

 3.   Operating Conditions -  The slag temperature range is 1000° to 1200°C
 Atmospheric  pressure  is used (1).

 4.   Utilities - Air  is injected into the  furnace  for combustion  of the
 coal.   Quantities are not cited in the  literature  (2).

 onn .uWaneL!S used for slag C0o1l"n9  and  granulation in amounts ranging from
 200 to  8,200 cubic meters per day (3), the amount  depending upon  the  design
 of cooling water circuit at a given  plant.  A typical analysis is given in


5.   Waste Streams - The exhaust gas from the furnace typically has a low
S02 concentration.  The literature (2) cites a value of 0.02 volume percent
for a  flow rate of 5,660 normal cubic meters per minute.   Gas stream  temper-
ature  is about 1200°C.

     The exit gas also contains high concentrations of particulate and fume
composed of the volatile components of the blast furnace slag.   The litera-
ture does not cite quantities or composition.

     The dumped slag and water used for  granulation constitute the major
waste stream from the process.   The slag is made up of various compounds of
iron,  calcium, silicon,  aluminum, magnesium,  and other elements.   The water-
soluble portions are leached by the cooling water.   Table 24 presents analy-
ses of the intake and outflow streams of water used for slag granulation
                                     42

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     TABLE 24.  WASTE  EFFLUENTS FROM  SLAG GRANULATION
Parameter
pH
Alkalinity
COD
Total solids
Dissolved solids
Suspended solids
Oil and grease
Sulfate (as S)
Chloride
Cyanide
Aluminum
Arsenic
Cadmium
Calcium
Chromium
Copper
Iron
Lead
Magnesium
Mercury
Molybdenum
Nickel
Potassium
Selenium
Silver
Sodium
Tellurium
Zinc
Total
plant
intake
mg/1
7.6
203
8
-
408
3
-
145
18
-
-
-
-
70
-
0.02
1.70
0.12
.31
-
-
0.03
-
-
-
-
-
0.05
Total
plant
discharge
mg/1
8.3
186
8
-
500
36
-
215
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
0.02
-
0.30
-
-
-
0.04
-
-
-
-
-
0.12
Net
change,
mg/1
-
-17
0
-
92
33
-
70
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
0
-
0.18
-
-
-
0.02
-
-
-
-
-
0.38
Net loading
kg/ton
-
NLCa
0
-
0.89
.32
-
0.67
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
0
-
0.0018
-
-
-
0.00018
-
-
-
-
-
0.0037
Process water flow:   6 million liters/day.



Production:   695  metric  tons/day.



Source:  This contract and  1971 RAPP data.



Notes:




  NLC = no load calculable.
                            43

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6.   Control Technology - The exhaust gas from the fuming furnace is cooled
by waste heat boilers or cooling chambers before being sent to baghouses for
removal of particulate and condensed volatiles.  Baghouse operation is
limited to a maximum temperature of 285°C.  Particulate removal efficiency
ranges from 95 to 99 percent (4).  It is preferable to operate the baghouse
at the lowest possible temperature to allow removal of volatile matter
contained in the gas stream.

     Slag disposal is the same as described in Process No. 5, involving
conveyance with the granulating water stream to a dump or tailings pond, use
of concrete settling pits, ground sealing, and diversion of runoff.

     Normally, it is desirable to recycle slag granulation water after
cooling and clarification.  A smaller stream is bled off  to neighboring
surface water to control buildup of water-soluble components.  The best
available control technology for wastewater treatment is  a combination of
neutralization and clarification; the resulting effluent  concentrations are
presented in Table 25.  The control methods in use are presented in Table
26.
                   TABLE 25.  EFFLUENT CONCENTRATIONS WITH
                      NEUTRALIZATION AND CLARIFICATION
Component
Cadmium
Lead
Mercury
Zinc
Concentration,
mg/1
0.5
0.5
0.005
5.0
These values are currently being met by five of the six lead smelters.

7.    EPA Classification Code - None

8.    References -

     1.    Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology.   Interscience Publishers, a
          division of John Wiley and Sons, Inc.  New York.   1967.

     2.    Arthur G.  McKee & Co.   Systems Study for Control  of Emissions
          Primary Nonferrous Smelting'industry.  U.S.  Department of Health,
          Education, and Welfare.   June 1969.

     3.    Hallowell, J.B., et al.   Water Pollution Control  in the Primary
          Nonferrous Metals Industry.   Volume I, Copper, Zinc, and Lead
          Industries.   Environmental Protection Agency.   Washington, D.C.
          EPA-R2-73-274a.   September 1973.
                                     44

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TABLE 26.  PRIMARY LEAD SLAG GRANULATION
       WASTEWATER TREATMENT (5)
Plant
1
2
3
4
5
6
Treatment
Sent to cooling pond.
Sent to settling pit then to
a cooling pond.
Sent to settling pond and
recycled.
Sent to two settling ponds in
series.
Sent to a slag pile.
No data.
Discharge
8,230 m3/day
(2,200,000 gpd)
273 m3/day
(72,000 gpd)
0
Discharge is present
but no quantities
are available.
No apparent discharge
to surface. Leaching
is not mentioned.
No data
                  45

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Vandergrift, A.E., L.J. Shannon, P.G. Gorman, E.W. Lawless, E.E.
Salle, and M. Reichel.  Particulate Pollutant System Study - Mass
Emissions, Volumes 1, 2, and 3.  U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency (NTIS).   Durham, North Carolina.  PB-203 128, PB-203 522,
and PB-203 521.   May 1971.

Development Document for Interim Final Effluent Limitations Guide-
lines and Proposed New Source Performance Standards for the Lead
Segment of the Nonferrous Metals Manufacturing Point Source Cate-
gory.   Environmental Protection Agency.  EPA-440/l-75/032-a.
February 1975.
                          46

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PRIMARY LEAD PRODUCTION                                     PROCESS NO.  7

                                  Crossing

!•   Function - Dressing is the initial step in refining lead bullion.
Molten bullion from the blast furnace is placed into dressing kettles of 90
metric-ton capacity where submerged air lances provide agitation and oxida-
tion.  The kettle and molten bullion are cooled to a temperature at which
lead is still a liquid but oxides of the common impurities and oxides of
lead solidify.   The term "dross" refers to any solid scum floating on top of
a metal bath.  Dross may contain varying amounts of lead, copper, tin,
indium, arsenic, antimony, and bismuth.  Because of the high specific
gravity of molten lead, these solid oxides float and are easily skimmed off
the molten lead.  Dressing of the blast furnace bullion always occurs before
the lead is sent to the refinery.

     For more complete removal of copper, sulfur is added to the dressing
kettle.  This sulfur combines with the remaining copper forming cuprous
sulfide (CU2S), which floats and is skimmed off with the rest of the dross.
By dressing, a bullion with copper content as high as 2 percent can be
reduced to approximately 0.005 percent copper (1).

     The dross is sent to a dross reverberatory furnace for further treat-
ment and recovery of marketable products.  Dross may typically contain  90
percent lead oxide, 2 percent copper, and 2 percent antimony, in addition to
other values such as gold, silver, arsenic, bismuth, indium, zinc, telluri-
um, nickel, selenium, and sulfur.   The collected dross amounts to 10 to 35
percent of the blast furnace bullion (1).  A typical assay of drossed bul-
lion is shown in Table 27.

2.   Input Materials - Lead bullion is the principal input.  During the dross-
ing procedures sulfur is added in a ratio of approximately 1 kilogram per ton
of bullion from the blast and dross reverberatory furnace.  Various amounts of
coal or coke, ammonium chloride, soda ash (Na2C03), and litharge or baghouse
fume (PbO) are added to the kettles as needed.

3.   Operating Conditions - The molten bullion is cooled to a temperature of
370° to 500°C and maintained within that range.   Pressures are atmospheric
(1).

4.   Utilities - Most of the dressing kettles are heated with natural  gas.
About 1.1 million kilocal ories per metric ton are consumed during this
stage,  of which 90 percent is allocated to gas and 10 percent to oil (2).
Conveyors, agitators, pumps, and similar equipment are powered by elec-
tricity.   Air is injected by submerged lances for supplementing oxidation
and agitation (1,5,6).   Quantities of electrical and air consumption are not
given in the literature.

5.   Waste Streams - The dressing operation generates small amounts of  air
pollutants and slag.  The air pollutants are S02 and volatile components of
the lead bullion.   A typical analysis of the bullion was presented in Table
19.   Varying quantities of copper, iron, arsenic, zinc, cadmium, antimony,
and bismuth may be volatilized; it is believed that the quantities are  very

                                     47

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 TABLE 27.   LEAD BULLION ANALYSIS (1,3,4)
         Basis:  As drossed
Element
Ni
Ag
Au
Cu
Fe
Te
As
Sb
Bi
Se
Sn
Wt. percent
tr.
0.13-0.31
1.2-3.19
0.08-0.005
0.7-0.8
0.01-0.03
0.7-1.1
1.0-1.75
0.01-0.03
tr.
tr.
Value of Au in g/metric ton.
tr.  = trace.
                48

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small because of the low temperatures.  The S02 content of the off-gas is
very low, usually less than 0.05 percent by volume.  Flow rates of exit
gases from a blast furnace are typically 5,100 to 5,500 normal cubic meters
per minute.  Temperatures of these gases are low, approximately 200° to 300°C
(6).  The particulate loading has been quantified by one source as being
between 1.0 and 21.7 grams per cubic meter of off-gas (7).  Another source
cites the emission rate as 10 kilograms per metric ton of lead produced.

6.   Control Technology - No control methods are presently applied to the
weak S02 stream emitted from the dressing operation.  The best available
technology is chemical scrubbing.

     Particulates and fumes from the dressing kettles are combined with the
blast furnace off-gas at all plants.  See Process No. 5.

7.   EPA Source Classification Code - None

8.   References -

     1.   Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology.  Interscience Publishers, a
          division of John Wiley and Sons, Inc.   New York.  1967.

     2.   Fejer, M.E., and D.H.  Larson.  Study of Industrial Uses of Energy
          Relative to Environmental Effects.   U.S. Environmental Protection
          Agency.  Research Triangle Park, North Carolina.  July 1974.

     3.   Development Document for Interim Final Effluent Limitations Guide-
          lines and Proposed New Source Performance Standards for the Lead
          Segment of the Nonferrous Metals Manufacturing Point Source Cate-
          gory.  Environmental Protection Agency.  EPA-440/l-75/032-a.
          February 1975.

     4.   PEDCo-Environmental Specialists, Inc.   Trace Pollutant Emissions
          from the Processing of Metallic Ores.   August 1974.

     5.   Background Information for New Source Performance Standards:
          Primary Copper, Zinc,  and Lead Smelters.  Volume I, Proposed
          Standards.  Environmental Protection Agency.  Research Triangle
          Park, North Carolina.   EPA-450/2-74-002a.  October 1974.

     6.   Arthur G.  McKee & Co.   Systems Study for Control of Emissions
          Primary Nonferrous Smelting Industry.   U.S. Department of Health,
          Education, and Welfare.  June 1969.

     7.   Jones, H.R.   Pollution Control in the Nonferrous Metals Industry.
          Noyes Data Corporation.  Park Ridge, New Jersey.  1972.
                                     49

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 PRIMARY  LEAD  PRODUCTION                                      PROCESS NO. 8

                         Dross  Reverberatory Furnace

 1.    Function - Dross removed from the  lead bullion requires  further treat-
 ment  for  separation of components.  As  cited in Process No.  7, the dross is
 composed  of about 90 percent lead oxide, 2 percent copper, 2  percent
 antimony, and small amounts of  other  elements.  Prior  to  smelting, the
 dross may be  treated with soda  ash, litharge or baghouse  fumes, coke, and
 sulfur to produce matte and speiss containing high ratios of  copper to lead.
 Whether treated or not, the dross is  charged into a reverberatory furnace
 along with pig iron and silica.  Lime rock may also be used.

      During smelting, the charge separates into four layers:   slag
 on top, matte and speiss intermediate,  and molten lead at the  bottom.
 Through the use of suitably placed taps on the furnace, each  layer can be
 removed separately.  The slag,  amounting to 2 to 4 weight percent of the
 dross charge, is returned to the blast  furnace for smelting.   The slag
 typically assays 6 percent copper, 38 percent lead, 11 percent zinc, 11
 percent FeO, and 16 percent Si02 (1).    The matte and speiss are tapped
 separately, granulated, and shipped to  copper smelters for recovery of
 copper and precious metals.   The matte  amounts to 10 to 14 weight percent of
 the dross charged; the speiss,  20 to  30 percent.   The  collective assay of
 these materials is 42 percent copper,  38 percent lead, 16 percent sulfur, 1
 percent iron, and 0.6 percent arsenic,  plus small  amounts of zinc, rare
 earths, and precious metals (1).  The lead layer is 94 to 98 percent lead
 and comprises 50 weight percent of the  dross charged.   It is returned to the
 blast furnace.

 2:   Input Materials - Along with the dross, the process requires the addi-
 tion of pig iron, silica,  and limestone.  The amounts  of these materials
 vary with each charge, depending upon dross composition.   If soda treatment
 is used, equal amounts of soda ash, litharge, coke, and sulfur are added.
 Each is 3 to 5 percent by weight, of the dross charged.

 3-   Operating Conditions  -  Smelting temperatures  are  the same as those in
 the blast furnace, ranging from 1000°  to 1200°C.   Smelting is done at atmo-
 spheric pressure.

 4.   Utilities - Gas or oil  fuels are  used for heating and maintaining
 temperature.   Quantities are not given  in the literature.

 5.   Waste Streams - Atmospheric emissions are the only form of pollution
 from the dross reverberatory furnace.   Particulate emission rates are 10
 kilograms per metric ton of  lead produced (2).   The reference does not
 indicate whether this  emission includes  condensed  fume.  Sulfur dioxide,
 carbon dioxide and monoxide,  sulfur trioxide,  and  nitrogen and its compounds
 are released to  the atmosphere as products of combustion.   The exit gas
 volume from a dross reverberatory ranges from 30  to 170 normal cubic  meters
per minute (2,3).   The S02  content of  this gas  is  usually below 0.05  per-
cent.   Exhaust gases are about 760° to 980°C (2).
                                     50

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     Water used in matte and speiss granulation is evaporated before trans-
port.

     All solids are recycled or marketed.

6.   Control Technology - No control methods are used for the weak S02
stream emitted from the dressing reverberatory.  The best available tech-
nology is chemical scrubbing.

     Particulates and fumes from the dressing  reverberatory are combined
with the blast furnace off-gas at all plants.  See Process No. 5.

7.   EPA Source Classification Code - None

8.   References -

     1.   Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology.   Interscience Publishers, a
          division of John Wiley and Sons, Inc.  New York.  1967.

     2.   Jones, H.R.   Pollution Control in the Nonferrous Metals Industry.
          Noyes Data Corporation.   Park Ridge,  New Jersey.  1972.

     3.   Arthur G.  McKee & Co.  Systems Study for Control of Emissions
          Primary Nonferrous Smelting Industry.  U.S. Department of Health,
          Education, and Welfare.   June 1969.
                                     51

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 PRIMARY LEAD PRODUCTION                                     PROCESS NO.  9

                               Cadmium Recovery

 1.    Function - The flue dusts generated by lead smelting are processed  to
 recover cadmium values.   Since dust from blast furnace exhaust gases is
 recycled to the sintering machine,  sinter dust becomes enriched in cadmium,
 thallium,  and zinc.   When cadmium content in the dust reaches 12 weight
 percent or greater,  the dust is subjected to a separate roasting operation
 for cadmium separation and recovery (1).

      Roasting is performed in one of several different types of small en-
 closures (2).  The objective is to selectively volatilize certain of the trace
 elements,  including cadmium, thallium,  indium, and selenium and to carry
 these fumes out of the roaster in a stream of air.  The less-volatile elements,
 including  lead, zinc, and antimony, remain in the roaster residue which  is
 recycled to the sintering machine feed  preparation equipment.

 2.    Input Materials  - Flue  dust collected from the  sintering machine ex-
 haust gases is  the only input material.

 3.    Operating  Conditions -  Operating temperature has not been reported;  it
 is,  however,  carefully controlled to provide optimum separation of the trace
 elements.

 4-    Utilities  -  Many of these roasters  are heated electrically and others are
 heated  with oil or gas.   The energy consumption of these  units has not been
 reported.

 5.   Waste  Streams -  Fume emissions  from the  roaster  are  cooled and
 recovered as  product.  The roaster  residue  is  recycled.   Data  for  fume
 capture are not furnished in the  literature.

     There  are  no  liquid  or  solid wastes from  cadmium recovery.

 6.   ControltTechnology - The  flue dust and fume emitted  from the  roaster
 can be contained by further cooling with water  sprays and collection  in a
 Dagnouse.

 ?•   EPA Source Classification Code - None

8.   References -

     1.    Arthur G. McKee & Co.  Systems Study for Control of Emission
          Primary Nonferrous  Smelting Industry.  U.S.  Department of Health
          Education,  and Welfare.   June  1969.

     2.    Hallowell,  J.B., et al.   Water Pollution Control in the Primary
          Nonferrous  Metals Industry. Volume I, Copper, Zinc, Lead Indus-
          tries.  Environmental Protection Agency.  Washington, D C
          EPA-R2-73-274a.   September 1973.
                                    52

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PRIMARY LEAD PRODUCTIONS                                    PROCESS NO.  10

                           Reverberatory Softening

1.    Function - The drossed lead bullion is further purified by a process
termed "softening", which entails removal of the elements that make lead
hard, notably arsenic, antimony, and tin.  Several other softening processes
can be used (Process No's.  11 and 12) (1,2).

     The reverberatory method is similar to the dressing procedure and is
particularly applicable to processing bullion with a wide range of impuri-
ties.  The bullion is charged into a reverberatory furnace, melted, and
blown with air to effect oxidation of the arsenic, antimony, tin, and other
impurities.  If hardness of the feed bullion is greater than 0.3 to 0.5
weight percent antimony equivalent, litharge is added to increase the rate
of impurity oxidation (1).

     Furnaces with capacities of up to 300 metric tons are used for the
process.  The oxides rise to the surface to form a slag that is skimmed off
and further treated to recover contained values.  The softened lead is
tapped from the bottom of the furnace and pumped to the desilverizing
process.  Table 28 presents typical analyses of the softened bullion product
and the softened slag.  Hardness of the softened bullion is less than 0.03
weight percent antimony equivalent.

2.    Input Materials - An analysis of drossed lead was presented in Table 27
(Process No. 7).[Ttharge is added only when especially hard bullion is
processed.  Coke or coal may be added to inhibit the oxidation of lead.

3.    Operating Conditions - Temperatures during softening reach 700°C.
Pressures are atmospheric (1).

4.    Utilities - Electricity is the power source for mechanical agitators,
pumps, and conveyors.  Most of the heat is supplied by the exothermic oxi-
dation of  impurities.  Any fossil fuel can be used to begin the reaction and
maintain the temperature.  Air  is  injected through lances or pipes  into  the
bath.  Air consumption is not reported.

5.    Waste Streams - The air blow from the furnace is the only waste stream
for the process.  No data are reported for fume emissions.

     There are no liquid or solid wastes from reverberatory softening.

6.    Control Technology - No controls of atmospheric fume emissions are
reported.  The exhaust gas could be routed to blast furnace baghouses.

7.    EPA Source Classification Code - None
                                      53

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 TABLE  28.  TYPICAL COMPOSITIONS OF SOFTENED LEAD BULLION AND SLAG (1)
                  (AMOUNTS IN WEIGHT PERCENT)
Constituent
Pb
Cu
Se
Te
As
Sb
Sn
Ag
Au
Softened lead
bullion

0.004


0.001
0.025

0.15
1.25a
Softened slag
(liquid dross)
75.
0.005
tr
tr
1.7
12.0
tr
tr
tr
Value for gold in grams per metric ton.
tr - trace.
                              54

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8.   References -

     1.    Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology.  Interscience Publishers, a
          division of John Wiley and Sons, Inc.  New York.  1967.

     2.    Development Document for Interim Final Effluent Limitations Guide-
          lines and Proposed New Source Performance Standards for the Lead
          Segment of the Nonferrous Metals Manufacturing Point Source Cate-
          gory.  Environmental Protection Agency.   EPA-440/l-75/032-a.
          February 1975.
                                     55

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 PRIMARY LEAD PRODUCTION                                     PROCESS NO.  11

                               Kettle Softening

 1.    [unction -  Arsenic,  antimony,  and tin may be removed from the drossed
 lead bullion by  kettle  softening.   Other softening methods are reverberatory
 (Process  No.  10) and Harris  (Process No.  12).   Unlike  the reverberatory
 method,  in  which air is blown  through molten  bullion,  the kettle  method
 entails  addition of  oxidizing  agents to remove impurities.   Application  is
 usually  limited  to treating  bullion with a relatively  low impurity content
 0.3  weight  percent or less antimony equivalent (1,2).

      Drossed bullion is charged  to  a kettle and melted.   Oxidizing fluxes
 such as  caustic  soda (NaOH)  and  niter (NaN03)  are then added while the
 charge  is agitated.   The  fluxes  react with the impurities to form a series
 of salts  such as sodium antimonate  (NaSb03) (1,3).   A  slag containing the
 oxidized  impurities  results.   When  the reactions  are complete,  agitation of
 the  kettle  is stopped,  and the slag rises  to  the  top of the kettle,  where  it
 is skimmed  off;  the  purified lead bullion  is  sent to the desilvering proc-
 ess.  Composition of the  softened bullion  is  similar to that shown in Table
 28 (Process  No.  10);  residual  hardness is  less than  0.03 weight percent
 antimony equivalent.

 2.    Input  Materials  -  In addition  to  the  drossed lead bullion, caustic soda
 and  sodium  nitrate (niter) are required for fluxing.   Amounts  depend upon
 the  impurity  content  of the feed bullion;  a slight excess  over  stoichio-
 metric requirements  is  desirable fo'r  effective removal  of  impurities.

 3-    Operating Conditions - A  kettle  temperature  of  700°C  is  required
 Pressure is atmospherical).

 4.    Utilities - Electricity is used to power  the process  equipment, such  as
 agitators and conveyors.  Gas  or oil are used  to  heat  the  kettle  and main-
 tain  temperature.

 5.    Waste Streams - Atmospheric emissions  containing  oxides of nitrogen are
 released during  kettle  softening.   Details  are  unreported.

      There are no liquid wastes from this process.

      The slag containing oxidized impurities is discarded.  This material
 contains lead as well as water-soluble sodium  oxide salts of arsenic, tin,
 and antimony.  The amount of slag generated is not reported.

 6-    Control Technology - The controls used for atmospheric emissions are
 not known.

      Slag is dumped with that generated in either the blast furnace or
 fuming furnace (2).   There is no  recognized control technology for disposi-
tion  of this slag.   Substitution  of  Harris softening (Process No  12) is
recommended.
                                     56

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7.    EPA Source Classification Code - None

8.    References -

     1.    Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology.  Interscience Publishers, a
          division of John Wiley and Sons, Inc.  New York.  1967.

     2.    Hallowell, J.B., et al.  Water Pollution Control in the Primary
          Nonferrous Metals Industry - Volume  I.  Copper, Zinc, and Lead
          Industries.  Environmental Protection Agency.  Washington, D.C.
          EPA-R2-73-274a.  September 1973.

     3.    Development Document for Interim Final Effluent Limitations Guide-
          lines and Proposed New Source Performance Standards for the Lead
          Segment of the Nonferrous Metals Manufacturing Point Source Cate-
          gory.  Environmental Protection Agency.  EPA-440/l-75/032-a.
          February 1975.
                                     57

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 PRIMARY LEAD PRODUCTION                                      PROCESS  NO.  12

                               Harris  Softening

 1.    Function -  In  addition  to reverberatory and  kettle  softening, removal of
 arsenic,  antimony,  and tin from drossed  lead bullion can also be accomplished
 by  the  Harris process.  As with kettle softening,  the  process is most applica-
 ble in  treating  bullions  containing 0.3  percent or less  antimony.

      The  process consists of two operations.  The  initial pyrometallurgical
 step is the  same as  the kettle softening process.   The drossed bullion is
 charged to a  kettle, melted, and agitated.  Sodium nitrate and sodium hydrox-
 ide are added to react with  the impurities and form metallic salts which float
 on  top  of the bath  in a mixture with  sodium oxide.  These salts are  skimmed
 off,  and  the  purified lead is  sent to the desilverizing  process (1).

      The  second operation is a  hydrometallurgic'al  treatment of the cooled
 skimmings, in which  hot water  is used to dissolve  the valuable constituents.
 Most  of the  skimmings will be  dissolved and will form a  strongly alkaline so-
 lution.   Any  undissolved residue is filtered from  the mixture and discarded.
 The clear solution  is then cooled to  preferentially precipitate sodium antimo-
 nate.   After  separation by filtration, the antimony-rich filter cake is sub-
 jected  to further processing (Process No. 13), and  the filtrate is mixed with
 lime  to precipitate calcium  salts of arsenic and tin in separate operations.

      Upon removal from solution, the calcium arsenate is reported to be sold
 to  insecticide manufacturers, and the calcium stannate is shipped to tin
 producers.  The residual  sodium hydroxide solution  is evaporated to produce
 dry sodium hydroxide, which  is  recycled to the softening process.

 2.    Input Materials - Aside from the drossed lead bullion,  sodium hydroxide
 and sodium nitrate are required in slightly more than stoichiometric amounts
 for fluxing.   Unspecified amounts of process water are fed to the operation
 for leaching.  Lime is required in quantities sufficient to  precipitate salts
 of arsenic and tin.

     Use  of sodium chloride and lead oxide in this process has  also been
 reported.

 3.   Operating Conditions - Maximum temperatures are 700°C for  the pyrometal-
 lurgical operation,  100°C for hydrometallurgical  processing,  and more than
 200°C for sodium hydroxide evaporation (2).   Atmospheric  pressure  is  main-
 tained during all  operations.

4-   Utilities - Process  equipment,  such  as  agitators,  pumps, and  conveyors,
are powered by electricity.

     Gas or oil is  utilized for kettle heating,  temperature maintenance,  and
sodium hydroxide recovery.
                                    58

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5.    Waste Streams - Atmospheric emissions containing oxides of nitrogen will
result from the use of sodium nitrate as an input material.

     The quantity of insoluble residue created from the leaching step has not
been reported.   Its composition is also unknown,  but it has  been reported to
be insoluble in water (1).

6.    Control Technology - No control  of air emissions from this process is
employed.  The leaching residue is apparently discarded along with blast
furnace or fuming furnace slag.

7.    EPA Source Classification Code - None

8.    References -

     1.   Hallowell, J.B. et al.  Water Pollution Control  in the Primary
          Nonferrous Metals Industry - Volume I.   Copper,  Zinc, and Lead
          Industries.  Environmental  Protection Agency.  Washington, D.C.
          EPA-R2-73-274a.  September 1973.

     2.   Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology.  Interscience Publishers, a
          division of John Wiley and Sons, Inc.  New York.  1967.
                                     59

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 PRIMARY LEAD PRODUCTION                                     PROCESS NO.  13

                               Antimony Recovery

 1.    Function - Slags from the softening processes (Process No's.  10, 11
 12) are treated in order to separate and recover the contained mineral
 values, notably arsenic, tin,  and antimony.   Two methods are commonly used
 to  recover antimony,  depending upon the product desired.

      If antimonial lead or "hard lead" is desired, the softening slag is
 subjected to a reduction process.   The slag  is  charged to a furnace and
 heated with a reducing agent and slagging fluxes.   Since the oxidation
 potential  of the other minerals in the charge is higher,  the oxides of  lead
 and antimony are preferentially reduced.   Slag  is  formed and skimmed off
 while  the metallic mixture of  lead and antimony is tapped as a marketable
 product.   If the slag is rich  in tin,  it may be sold to a tin producer-
 otherwise,  it is recycled to the sintering process or blast furnace (1).

      If the desired product is  antimony trioxide (Sb203),  the softening  slag
 teed is treated by a  volatilization process.  The  slag is  fed to a  furnace
 where  it is heated to volatilize arsenic trioxide  and antimony trioxide
 Since  arsenic trioxide is more  volatile,  it  is  driven off  first and is
 separated  from the antimony trioxide by selective  condensation (2)    Col-
 lection of  the oxides consists  of  condensing the volatilized fume and
 capturing  it in an electrostatic precipitator or a baghouse.   The recovered
 antimony trioxide  is  sent to antimony  refining  plants,  usually located
 nearby.   Recovered arsenic  trioxide may be sold to arsenic  processors   The
 nonvolatilized furnace residue,  containing appreciable  lead values   is
 returned to the blast furnace or sintering process.

 2.   Input  Materials  -  Slag  from the softening  processes  is  the  main  input-
 it  contains  primarily lead,  arsenic, antimony,  and tin.  A  typical  analysis
 is  presented  in  Table 28  (Process  No.  10).   For  production  of  hard  lead!
 coke or  charcoal is used  as  a reductant,  the  quantity dependent  on  feed  slag
 composition.   Soda  ash  or  silica is used  as  a flux.   No quantitative  data
 are  reported.

 3-   Operating  Conditions - Temperatures  range  from 800° to  900°C   Pres-
 sures are atmospheric  (2).

 4    Utilities - Gas  or oil is used to maintain  furnace temperatures
 Electricity is  required for operation of conveyors.   In antimony trioxide
 production, cooling water is required for fume condensation.  No quanti-
 tative data are furnished in the literature.

5    Waste Streams -  In the volatilization process, the airstream carrying
the  oxide fume is released to the atmosphere  after condensation and collec-
tion.

     There are no liquid wastes from antimony recovery.
                                    60

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     The arsenic tri oxide, if it cannot be sold, represents the only solid
waste from the process.

6.   Control Technology - In the volatilization and condensation process,
the fume stream passes through an electrostatic precipitator or baghouse
     No established control for excess arsenic trioxide has been developed.

7.   EPA Source Classification Code - None

8.   References -

     1.   Hallowell, J.B., et al.  Water Pollution Control in the Primary
          Nonferrous Metals Industry.  Volume I, Copper, Zinc, and Lead
          Industries.   Environmental Protection Agency.  Washington, D.C.
          EPA-R2-72-274a.  September 1973.

     2.   Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology.  Interscience Publishers, a
          division of John Wiley and Sons, Inc.   New York.  1967.

     3.   Development Document for Interim Final Effluent Limitations Guide-
          lines and Proposed New Source Performance Standards for the Lead
          Segment of the Nonferrous Metals Manufacturing Point Source Cate-
          gory.  Environmental Protection Agency.   EPA-440/l-75/032-a.
          February 1975.
                                      61

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 PRIMARY  LEAD  PRODUCTION                                      PROCESS  NO.  14

                             Parkes Desilverizing

 1.    Function - Gold and  silver are  removed  from  the  softened  lead bullion
 by  the Parkes desilverizing  process.  These  metals  do not  oxidize easily,
 and they are  not  removed  by  any of the previous refining steps.  The Parkes
 desilverizing process  is  based on the fact that gold  and silver  have a
 greater  affinity  for zinc than for lead.  Therefore,  zinc  is added to the
 molten lead bullion to form  alloys with the  copper, gold,  and  silver con-
 tained in the bullion.  These alloys are  insoluble  in the  lead and rise  to
 the surface,  forming a crust that is skimmed off.

      To  simplify  subsequent  recovery processes, the gold and silver  are
 often recovered in separate  steps.   Since gold and most of the copper are
 first to combine, zinc is added in two steps.  The  initial addition  results
 in  a  crust rich in gold values (1,2).  Following  removal of this crust,  the
 second addition of zinc is made to allow  the removal  of silver.  Although
 these steps are not totally  exclusive for either  gold or silver, they do
 effect a good degree of segregation.

      Because other metallic  impurities, notably arsenic, can interfere with
 this  process, they must be removed prior  to this  operation.  Arsenic content
 in  the bullion must be less  than 0.10 weight percent  (1).

 2.    Input Materials - Softened lead bullion is required for the process.
 Hardness equivalent to less  than 0.03 combined weight percent  of arsenic,
 antimony, and tin is desirable.   A typical analysis for a  softened bullion
 is  presented in Table 28, Process No. 10.

      Zinc is the only additive.   The amount is 1  to 2  percent  in excess of
 the amount required to saturate the lead bullion, i.e., 0.55 weight  percent
 of  bullion weight.

 3-    Operating Conditions - The bullion charge is heated to 540°C and then
 cooled to 40" to 93UC (1,3).   Pressure is atmospheric.

 4.    Utilities - Gas or oil  is used to heat the charge.  Electricity  is used
 to  operate pumps and agitators.   Utility quantities are not given in  the
 literature.

 5.   Waste Streams - None

 6.   Control  Technology - None

 7.   EPA Source Classification Code - None

8.   References -

     1.    Encyclopedia of Chemical  Technology.   Interscience Publishers, a
          division of John Wiley  and Sons, Inc.   New York.   1967.
                                     62

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2.    Hallowell, J.B., et al.  Water Pollution Control in the Primary
     Nonferrous Metals Industry.  Volume I, Copper, Zinc, and Lead
     Industries.   Environmental Protection Agency.  Washington, D.C.
     EPA-R2-73-274a.   September 1973.

3.    Development Document for Interim Final Effluent Limitations Guide-
     lines and Proposed New Source Performance Standards for the Lead
     Segment of the Nonferrous Metals Manufacturing Point Source Cate-
     gory.  Environmental Protection Agency.   EPA-440/l-75/032-a.
     February 1975.
                                63

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PRIMARY LEAD PRODUCTION
                              PROCESS NO. 15
                                  Retorting

1.   Function - Crusts from the Parkes process are retorted to recover zinc
for reuse in the desilvering process and to form a purified Dore metal.
Dross is placed in graphite crucibles of 600 tp 640 kilograms capacity;
these are heated in a special
vaporized.  The zinc vapor is
to bars or blocks for recycle
kilograms Dore per metric ton of dross (1).
analysis of this retort metal.
Faber-du-Faur-type furnace, and the zinc is
condensed in a cooling chamber and then tapped
  The remaining retort metal assays 140 to 400
               Table 29 presents a typical
                   TABLE 29.  TYPICAL RETORT ANALYSIS (1)
Constituent
'
Dore
Zinc
Arsenic
Antimony

% weight
15.6-43.8
1.5-2.5
0.4
1.0

Constituent
Copper
Tel lurium
Bismuth
Lead

% weight
1.5-4.0
0.2
0.25
Remaining
percentage
2.   Input Materials - Crusts from the desilverizing process are the only
input materials for this process.  This dross is basically a gold-silver-
zinc compound with small amounts of impurities such as antimony, copper,
tellurium, bismuth, and lead.

3.   Operating Conditions - Operating temperatures during retorting are
between 1260° and 1320°C (1).  Pressure is atmospheric.
4.   Utilities - The retort furnaces are gas- or oil-fired.
consumed by transport apparatus.  No quantities are cited.
                               Electricity is
5.    Waste Streams - The only waste stream consists of small quantities of
metallic fume escaping the condensing chamber.  This fume is believed to be
composed predominately of zinc, arsenic, antimony, and lead.  No data were
found on emission factors or constituents.

6.    Control Technology - Several  smelters control fume and particulate
emissions with baghouses.  Destruction of baghouse fabric at high tempera-
tures is prevented by routing the gases through tubular cooling chambers
prior to entering the baghouse.  Control efficiencies of more than 98 per-
cent are claimed.  The collected flue dusts are recycled to the sintering
machine.  Other smelters use no control devices on retorts.

7.    EPA Source Classification Code - None

8.    References -
     1.    Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology.
          division of John Wiley and Sons, Inc.
                  Interscience Publishers,
                   New York.   1967.
                                     64

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PRIMARY LEAD PRODUCTION                                     PROCESS NO. 16

                                  Cupel ling

1.   Function - Retort metal is purified in the process called cupelling.
In a furnace called a cupel, the molten metal charge is successively blown
with air and slagged to remove impurities and produce a relatively pure
Dore.  The difference in oxidation potentials of the impurities allows
sequential removal of slags with distinct characteristics.

     Zinc, arsenic, and antimony are oxidized first and removed; most of the
lead content oxidizes next, forming a product called "good litharge."  Upon
removal, it is recycled to the softening process for use as an oxidizer.
Bismuth, copper, and tellurium accumulate in the Dore until the final stages
of cupelling, when they oxidize to a slag called "coppery litharge" because
the copper content may be as high as 10 weight percent.  Oxidizing agents
are^required to remove the last traces of copper and tellurium from the
Dore.  These latter slags are returned to smelting for further processing.

     Cupels are rated according to Dore output.   Usual capacities range from
2,850 to 11,300 kilograms per charge.   When impurity removal is complete,
the remaining gold-silver alloy is cast into bars for marketing.  Purity is
99.9 percent.

2.   Input Materials - Retort metal is the basic feed to the process.  A
typical analysis of the metal is given in Table 29, Process No. 15.

     Sodium nitrate and silica flour are added to remove the last traces of
copper and tellurium from the Dore.  Amounts depend upon residual levels of
the impurities.

3.   Operating Conditions - Temperature of the cupel reaches 1150°C (1).
Pressure is atmospheric.

4.   Utilities - Gas or oil is used to heat the furnace.   Pumps and agita-
tors are electrically powered.   Cooling water is pumped through jacketed
furnace sections.   Compressed air is injected into the charge for oxidation
of impurities.   A cold air stream is also blown across the face of the bath
at a pressure of 70 to 87 grams per square centimeter to cause rippling,
which hastens oxidation.   No additional quantitative data are given.

5.   Waste Streams - Process exhaust gases range in temperature from 1000°
to 1100°C and contain metallic vapors  (fume) as well as particulates.  Zinc,
lead, arsenic,  and antimony comprise the fume.   Particulates may contain any
of the components listed in Table 29 (Process No.  15).   Emission data are
not present in the literature.

6.   Control  Technology - Several  smelters control exhaust gases, cooling
them by passage through tubular cooling chambers before routing them to
baghouses.   Collection efficiency greater than 98 weight percent is claimed.
Collected dust is recycled to the smelter for further processing.  Other
smelters do not control  cupel emissions.
                                     65

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7.    EPA Source Classification Code - None

8.    References -

     1.    Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology.  Interscience Publishers, a
          division of John Wiley and Sons, Inc.  New York.  1967.
                                     66

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PRIMARY LEAD PRODUCTION                                     PROCESS NO. 17

                              Vacuum Dezincing

1.   Function - Zinc added to the bullion in the desilverizing process is
removed by dezincing.  The vacuum distillation method is used most widely in
the industry because the recovered metallic zinc can be directly recycled to
the desilvering process.  Alternate methods are chlorine dezincing (Process
No. 18) and Harris dezincing (Process No. 19).

     Desilverized lead  is charged into a kettle and heated.  An inverted
bell is placed on top of the kettle with its skirt projecting into the
molten lead to form a vacuum seal.  A vacuum is drawn in the bell and is
held for about 2.5 hours, during which the bath is agitated to bring the
zinc to the surface.   The zinc vaporizes and is condensed on the water-
cooled dome of the bell..  On completion of the process, the vacuum is
broken, the bell removed, and the solidified zinc peeled from the surface of
the bell.

     The product bullion typically is analyzed as less than 0.001 weight
percent zinc, 0.0003 weight percent antimony, and 0.15 weight percent
bismuth (1).  The bullion is sent for debismuthizing or for casting if
bismuth content is low (2).

2.   Input Materials - Desilverized lead bullion typically containing 0.5 to
1.0 weight percent zinc is the only feed material (3).

3.   Operating Conditions -  The molten lead bath is maintained at 580° to
595°C (1,2) with an operating pressure of 50 to 60 micrometers absolute (1).

4-   Utilities - Gas or oil  is used to maintain the kettle temperature.
Pumps, agitators, and conveyors are electrically powered.   Cooling water is
used to remove heat from the jacketed bell  surface.   Although no quantita-
tive data are given in the literature, energy consumption is higher than in
other dezincing processes because of the higher temperature requirements.

5.   Waste Streams - None

6.   Control Technology - None

7.   EPA Source Classification Code - None

8.   References -

     1.    Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology.   Interscience Publishers, a
          division of John Wiley and Sons,  Inc.   New York.   1967.

     2.    Hallowell,  J.B., et al.   Water Pollution Control  in the Primary
          Nonferrous Metals  Industry.   Volume I, Copper, Zinc, and Lead
          Industries.   Environmental  Protection Agency.   Washington,  D.C.
          EPA-R2-73-274a.   September 1973.
                                    67

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Development Document for Interim Final Effluent Limitations Guide-
lines and Proposed New Source Performance Standards for the Lead
Segment of the Nonferrous Metals Manufacturing Point Source Cate-
gory.  Environmental Protection Agency.  EPA-440/175-032a
February 1975.
                          68

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PRIMARY LEAD PRODUCTION                                     PROCESS NO. 18

                             Chlorine Dezincing

1.   Function - Desilverized lead bullion requires removal of the zinc added
during the desilverizing process.  A process known as chlorine dezincing, or
the Betterton process, can be used, as well as vacuum dezincing (Process No.
17) and Harris dezincing (Process No. 19).

     Molten lead is pumped from a heated kettle to a reaction chamber into
which gaseous chlorine is injected from a chlorine tank.  Since reactivity
of zinc with chlorine is greater than that of lead, zinc chloride is formed
in the reactor and subsequently collects on the surface of the molten lead.
The material skimmed from the lead contains small amounts of lead chloride
and mechanically entrained lead prills.   After treatment with metallic zinc
for lead removal and recovery, a marketable byproduct analyzed as 99 percent
zinc chloride is obtained.   The dezinced lead bullion is sent for debis-
muthizing or casting.

     A 180-metric-ton kettle with an overall cycle of about 8 hours
typically produces 16,300 metric tons of dezinced bullion per month.  The
bullion contains 0.005 weight percent zinc (1).

2.   Input Materials - The desilverized lead bullion feed contains 0.5 to
1.0 weight percent zinc.

     Chlorine is injected at a rate of 180 to 225 kilograms per hour into
molten lead recirculated at a rate of 7 to 11 metric tons per minute (1).

3.   Operating Conditions - A temperature of 370°C maintains the lead in a
molten condition.   Pressure is atmospheric (1).

4.   Utilities - The kettle is heated with oil or gas.   Electricity is used
for pumps, agitators, and conveyors.   No quantitative data regarding con-
sumption are cited.

5.   Waste Streams - None

6.   Control Technology - None

7.   EPA Source Classification Code - None

8.   References -

     1.    Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology.   Interscience Publishers, a
          division of John Wiley and Sons, Inc.   New York.   1967.
                                      69

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 PRIMARY LEAD  PRODUCTION                                      PROCESS NO.  19

                               Harris  Dezincing

 1.    Function -  Zinc  added  to  the  lead  bullion for desilverizing  requires
 removal  by  a  dezincing process.  The  Harris  dezincing  process  consists  of  a
 pyrometallurgical  step followed  by a  hydrometallurgical  procedure.   Alter-
 nate  dezincing processes  are vacuum (Process  No.  17) and chlorine (Process
 No. 18).

      The pyrometallurgical  equipment  is  the  same  as for  Harris  softening
 (Process No.  12),  i.e., a charging kettle, a  reaction  cylinder, and a molten
 lead  pump.  In a typical  cycle,  desilverized  lead bullion is charged to  the
 kettle  and  then  pumped, in  a molten state, through the reaction cylinder,
 which contains a small amount  of caustic  soda  saturated  with lead oxide.
 The saturated caustic remains  from the previous dezincing cycle.   Upon
 contact  with  the molten lead,  the  lead oxide  in the caustic reacts  with  the
 zinc  to  form  zinc  oxide,  which in  turn reacts  with caustic to  form  sodium
 zincate.  After  30 minutes  of  lead recirculation,  pumping is stopped, fresh
 caustic  is  added to the cylinder to maintain  salt fluidity, and the contents
 of the cylinder  are emptied into a granulator  tank.  Fresh molten caustic  is
 again pumped  to  the cylinder,  and  recirculation of the lead bullion is re-
 sumed.   The final  caustic addition will become saturated with zinc  and lead
 oxide and is  held  over for  the next cycle.  When  dezincing is complete,  the
 product  contains less than  0.001 weight percent zinc and 0.0003 weight
 percent  antimony.  The dezinced  lead  is pumped from the  kettle for  debis-
 muthizing or  casting.

      The spent salts from the granulation tank are treated hydrometal-
 lurgically.    After granulation and  solution in hot water, sodium  zincate
 hydrolyzes to  zinc oxide  and sodium hydroxide.  The zinc  oxide precipitates
 from  the solution and is  recovered  by filtration.   It  is  subsequently dried
 and sold.  The sodium hydroxide  solution is evaporated,  and the resulting
 anhydrous caustic recycled  (1).

 2.    Input Materials - Desilverized lead containing 0.5  to 1.0 weight per-
 cent  lead is  charged to the process.  Anhydrous sodium hydroxide  is
 required, the amount dependent upon the zinc content of  the feed  bullion.
Water is used  for the  hydroextraction of byproducts.  No data as  to quanti-
ties are given.

3.   Operating Conditions  -  A temperature of 540°C is  required for the
pyrometallurgical operation.  The temperature for hydroextraction is 100°C.
Evaporation  of the sodium  hydroxide solution requires  temperatures above
200 C.  All  operations are performed at atmospheric pressure (1).
     Utilities - Kettle heating and soda evaporation of caustic require gas
    il  as fuel.   Electricity is used to operate pumps, agitators,  and con-
4.
or oil as fuel.
veyors.
                                    70

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5.   Waste Streams - None

6.   Control Technology - None

7.   EPA Source Classification Code - None

8.   References -

     1.    Encylopedia of Chemical Technology.  Interscience Publishers,  a
          division of John Wiley and Sons, Inc.  New York.  1967.
                                     71

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PRIMARY LEAD PRODUCTION                                     PROCESS NO. 20

                               Debismuthizing

1.    Function - When the dezinced lead bullion contains 0.15 weight percent
or more bismuth, it must be debismuthized before the final refining and
casting process.  The debismuthizing procedure is called the Betterton-Kroll
process.

     Calcium and magnesium are added to the molten lead to form ternary
compounds (e.g., CaMg2Bi2) with the bismuth (1).   The compounds have a
higher melting point than lead and a lower density.   Therefore, when the
temperature of the mixture is reduced to just above the melting point of
lead, the metallic compounds solidify to form a dross that can be skimmed
from the lead.   To enhance physical separation, antimony or organic agents
are sometimes added.  Chlorine steam may also be used.

     The purified lead is pumped to the casting operation, and the skimmed
metallic compound is sent to bismuth recovery.

     Cupel  slags rich in bismuth may be similarly treated; the residual lead
is returned to smelting.

2.    Input Materials - Dezinced lead bullion fed to the process typically
assays 0.001 weight percent zinc, 0.0003 weight percent antimony, and 0.15
weight percent bismuth (2).  The quantities of calcium and magnesium added
depend on the amount of bismuth to be removed.  Twice as much calcium is
added as magnesium.   Cupel slags are added when bismuth content is high
enough (20 to 25 weight percent) to warrant recovery.  Antimony or organic
compounds are added as needed to improve bismuth separation.   The literature
does not specify the organic compounds or the amounts.

3.    Operating Conditions - The molten lead bath is maintained at 500° to
550°C (1,3) for calcium-magnesium addition and is cooled to 350°C for dross
separation.  Pressure is atmospheric.

4.    Utilities - A small  amount of gas or oil is required to maintain the
lead bath temperature.  Pumps and agitators are electrically powered.

5.    Waste Streams - None

6.    Control Technology - None

7.    EPA Source Classification Code - None

8.    References -

     1.    Development Document for Interim Final  Effluent Limitations Guide-
          lines and Proposed New Source Performance Standards for the Lead
          Segment of the Nonferrous Metals Manufacturing Point Source Cate-
          gory.  Environmental Protection Agency.   EPA-440/l-75/032-a.
          February 1975.


                                     72

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2.    Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology.  Interscience Publishers, a
     division of John Wiley and Sons, Inc.  New York.  1967.

3.    Hallowell, J.B., et al.  Water Pollution Control in the Primary
     Nonferrous Metals Industry.  Volume I, Copper, Zinc, and Lead
     Industries.   Environmental Protection Agency.  Washington, D.C.
     EPA-R2-73-274a.  September 1973.
                                73

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 PRIMARY  LEAD  PRODUCTION                                      PROCESS  NO.  21

                               Bismuth  Refining

 1.    Function  - The dross generated by debismuthizing  is  processed for bismuth
 recovery.  The material  is placed  in a furnace, where  it  is  melted.  Chlorine
 gas  is injected, and the calcium,  magnesium, zinc, and  lead  combine  with the
 chlorine to form chlorides more readily than does bismuth.   The chlorides form
 a  solid  slag  that  is skimmed from  the  surface of the molten  bismuth.  Air is
 then  blown through the bismuth, and a  caustic soda flux is added to  oxidize
 any  residual  impurities.  After slag removal, the metal,  which is now 99.99
 percent  bismuth, is cast into  marketable shapes and sold  (1).

      Alternate methods of bismuth  refining are also in  use involving wet
 chemical  processing; these methods are not addressed in this report.

 2.    Input Materials - The slag from the debismuthizing process is chiefly
 composed  of ternary compounds  of calcium, magnesium, and  bismuth.  Chlorine
 constitutes about 25 weight percent of the slag charged to the furnace.
 Caustic  soda flux is used in varying amounts for oxidation of impurities.
 Charcoal  is used as a cover during casting to maintain  the bismuth in a
 reduced  state.

 3.    Operating Conditions - Bath temperature during chlorination is  500°C.
 Subsequent temperatures for oxidation  and casting are lower.  Pressure is
 atmospheric (1).

 4.    Utilities - Gas or oil  is used for heating and maintaining temperature.
 Electricity is used to run pumps and agitators.   Compressed air is furnished
 to oxidize impurities.   The literature does not state the quantities required.

 5.    Waste Streams - Exhaust gases to  the atmosphere contain chlorine and
 fume.  No emission quantities were found.

      There are no liquid wastes from the process.

      Slag composed of chlorides of calcium,  magnesium,  zinc,  and lead is  40
weight percent of the dross  fed to the process.   Final  oxidation generates a
 soda  slag in unspecified amounts.

6.    Control  Technology - Control  of atmospheric emissions is not practiced.

      Slags are discarded with those generated in smelting.  Further infor-
mation is given in Process  No's.  5 and 6.   The  chloride salts contained in
the slag are very water-soluble and easily  leached  into adjacent water
supplies.  Existing practice  does  not  represent  good  control  technology.

7-    EPA Source Classification  Code -  None

8.   References -

     1.    Encyclopedia  of Chemical  Technology.   Interscience  Publishers,  a
          division  of John Wiley  and Sons,  Inc.   New  York.   1967.

                                     74

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PRIMARY LEAD PRODUCTION                                     PROCESS NO. 22

                         Final Refining and Casting

1.   Function - Refined lead bullion from dezincing or debismuthizing  is
given a final purification and cast into ingots.  The refined lead is  fluxed
with oxidizing agents to remove remaining impurities such as lead oxide and
magnesium or calcium residues.  After slag removal by skimming, the lead,
assayed as 99.999 percent purity, is reheated and sent to the casting  opera-
tion, where it is formed into ingots or pigs.  Most casting is performed by
fully automated machines.  Slag is recycled to the blast furnace (1).

2-   Input Materials - Refined bullion containing a small amount of impuri-
ties is fed to the process.  Caustic soda and sodium nitrate are used  as
oxidizing flux in amounts varying with the impurity of the lead (1,2).
Water is used to cool the cast lead ingots by direct contact, at rates
ranging from 300 to 1,500 liters per minute (3).

3.   Operating Conditions - Temperatures for final purification range  from
370° to 500UC; casting is at 540°C (1,4).   Pressure is atmospheric.

4-   Utilities - Gas or oil is required for heating.   Pumps and agitators
are electrically operated.   The literature gives no data on quantities.

5. ^ Waste Streams - Small  amounts of atmospheric emissions are released
during refining and casting operations.   Emission factors and constituents
have not been reported.

     Direct-contact cooling water becomes contaminated with particulate
matter, including lead and lead oxides.

6.   Control Technology - There are no controls on the atmospheric emis-
sions.

     Several methods are used to handle the contaminated cooling water.  The
water is either recycled for use in slag granulation or is sent to a tail-
ings pond for settling of suspended solids.   A variation of the latter
method, liming the effluent for precipitation of solids, is also practiced


7.   EPA Source Classification Code - None

8.   References -

     1.    Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology.   Interscience Publishers, a
          division of John  Wiley and Sons, Inc.   New York.  1967.

     2.    Development Document for Interim Final Effluent Limitations Guide-
          lines and Proposed New Source Performance Standards for the  Lead
          Segment of the Nonferrous Metals Manufacturing Point Source Cate-
          gory.   Environmental Protection Agency.   EPA-440/l-75/032-a.
          February 1975.


                                     75

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TECHNICAL REPORT DATA
(Please read Instructions on the reverse before completing)
1. REPORT NO. 2. 	
EPA-600/2-80-168
4. TITLE AND SUBTITLE
Industrial Process Profiles for Environmental Use:
Chapter 27 Primary Lead Industry
7. AUTHOR(S)
Same as Below
9. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION NAME AND ADDRESS
5EDCo Environmental, Inc.
L1499 Chester Road
Cincinnati, Ohio 45246
12. SPONSORING AGENCY NAME AND ADDRESS
Industrial Environmental Research Laboratory
)ffice of Research and Development
I. S. Environmental Protection Agency
Cincinnati, Ohio 45268
3. RECIPIENT'S ACCESSION NO.
5. REPORT DATE
July 1980 issuing date
6. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION CODE
8. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION REPORT NO.
10. PROGRAM ELEMENT NO.
1AB604
11. CONTRACT/GRANT NO.
68-03-2577
13. TYPE OF REPORT AND PERIOD COVERED
One of Series
14. SPONSORING AGENCY CODE
EPA/600/12
15. SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES 	 — 	 — 	
'reject Officer: John 0. Burckle
The catalog of Industrial Process Profiles for Environmental Use was developed
is an aid in defining the environmental impacts of industrial activity in the United
States. Entries for each industry are in consistent format and form separate chap-
ters of the study.
The primary lead industry as defined for this study consists of mining bene-
  iciation,  smelting, and refining.   A profile of  the  industry is given  including
  lant  locations, capacities,  and  various statistics regarding production  and  con-
 traption of lead, co-products,- and  by-products.   The  report summarizes  the  various
  ommercial  routes practiced domestically for lead production in a series  of process
  low diagrams and detailed process  descriptions.  Each  process description  includes
 available data regarding input  materials, operating conditions, energy  and  utility
 requirements, waste streams produced (air,  water, and solid waste), and control
 technology  practices and problems.
17.
                                KEY WORDS AND DOCUMENT ANALYSIS
                  DESCRIPTORS
Hxhaust Emissions
Smelting
Trace Elements
Pollution
                                               XIDENTIFIERS/OPEN ENDED TERMS
Lead  Production
                                                                          c. COS AT I Field/Group
13B
                                               19. SECURITY CLASS (This Report)
                                                  Unclassified
Release to Public
20. SECURITY CLASS (Thispage)
   Unclassified
                           21. NO. OF PAGES
                                   82
                                                                          22. PRICE
EPA Form 2220-1 (Rev. 4-77)   PREVIOUS EDITION is OBSOLETE
                                             76
                                                                       PRINTING OFF 1CE:1°8n.-P57- 1fi5/nna4

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