Isasmelt: The ISASMELT Furnace Advantages of The ISASMELT Process History of The Process
Isasmelt: The ISASMELT Furnace Advantages of The ISASMELT Process History of The Process
Smelters based on the copper ISASMELT process are among the lowest-cost copper smelters in the
world.[3]
Contents
The ISASMELT furnace
Advantages of the ISASMELT process
History of the process
Early developmental work (1973–1980)
Lead ISASMELT development
Small-scale work (1978–1983)
The lead ISASMELT pilot plant (1983–1990)
The lead ISASMELT demonstration plant (1991–1995)
Commercial primary-lead ISASMELT plants (2005– )
Secondary-lead smelting (1982– )
Copper ISASMELT development
Small-scale test work (1979–1987)
The copper ISASMELT demonstration plant (1987–1992)
Commercial primary-copper ISASMELT plants (1990– )
AGIP Australia Pty Ltd
Freeport-McMoRan Copper and Gold Inc.
Mount Isa Mines Limited
Sterlite Industries (India) Limited
Yunnan Copper Corporation Limited
Mopani Copper Mines plc
Southern Peru Copper Corporation
Kazzinc
First Quantum Minerals
Commercial secondary-copper ISASMELT plants
Umicore N.V.
Aurubis AG
References
Mineral concentrates or materials for recycling are dropped into the bath
through another hole in the furnace roof or, in some cases, injected down the
lance. These feed materials react with the oxygen in the injected gas,
resulting in an intensive reaction in a small volume (relative to other
smelting technologies).
ISASMELT lances contain one or more devices called "swirlers" that cause
the injected gas to spin within the lance, forcing it against the lance wall,
cooling it. The swirler consists of curved vanes around a central pipe
forming an annular flow. [5] They are designed to minimize pressure losses
changing the angle from axial to tangential thus creating a strong vortex [6].
The vortex helps mix liquids and solids with oxygen in the bath.[7] The
cooling effect results in a layer of slag "freezing" on the outside of the lance.
This layer of solid slag protects the lance from the high temperatures inside
the furnace. The tip of the lance that is submerged in the bath eventually
wears out, and the worn lance is easily replaced with a new one when
necessary. The worn tips are subsequently cut off and a new tip welded onto
the lance body before it is returned to the furnace.
Cut-away view of an
ISASMELT furnaces typically operate in the range of 1000–1200 °C, Isasmelt furnace. Image
depending on the application.[4][8] The refractory bricks that form the courtesy of Xstrata
internal lining of the furnace protect the steel shell from the heat inside the Technology.
furnace.
The products are removed from the furnace through one or more "tap holes" in a process called "tapping".
This can be either continuous removal or in batches, with the tap holes being blocked with clay at the end of
a tap, and then reopened by drilling or with a thermic lance when it is time for the next tap.
The products are allowed to separate in a settling vessel, such as a rotary holding furnace or an electric
furnace.
While smelting sulfide concentrates, most of the energy needed to heat and melt the feed materials is
derived from the reaction of oxygen with the sulfur and iron in the concentrate. However, a small amount of
supplemental energy is required. ISASMELT furnaces can use a variety of fuels, including coal, coke,
petroleum coke, oil and natural gas. The solid fuel can be added through the top of the furnace with the other
feed materials, or it can be injected down the lance. Liquid and gaseous fuels are injected down the lance.
The history of the ISASMELT process began with the invention in 1973 of the Sirosmelt lance by Drs Bill
Denholm and John Floyd at the CSIRO.[16][17] The lance was developed as a result of investigations into
improved tin-smelting processes, in which it was found that the use of a top-entry submerged lance would
result in greater heat transfer and mass transfer efficiencies.[17]
The idea of top-entry submerged lances goes back to at least 1902, when such a system was attempted in
Clichy, France.[18] However, early attempts failed because of the short lives of the lances on submersion in
the bath. The Mitsubishi copper smelting process is one alternative approach, wherein lances are used in a
furnace, but they are not submerged into the bath. Instead, they blow oxygen-enriched air onto the surface of
the slag (top jetting).[19] Similarly, a water-cooled, top-jetting lance was the basis of the LD (Linz-
Donawitz) steelmaking process. This does not produce the same intensity of mixing in the bath as a
submerged lance.[17]
The CSIRO scientists first tried developing a submerged lance system using a water-cooled lance system,
but moved to an air-cooled system because "scale up of the water-cooled lance would have been
problematic".[17] Introducing any water to a system involving molten metals and slags can result in
catastrophic explosions, such as that in the Scunthorpe Steelworks in November 1975 in which 11 men lost
their lives.[20]
The inclusion of the swirlers in the Sirosmelt lance and forming a splash coating of slag on the lance were
the major innovations that led to the successful development of submerged lance smelting.
From 1973, the CSIRO scientists began a series of trials using the Sirosmelt lance to recover metals from
industrial slags in Australia, including lead softener slag at the Broken Hill Associated Smelters in Port Pirie
(1973), tin slag from Associated Tin Smelters in Sydney (1974), copper converter slag at the Electrolytic
Refining and Smelting ("ER&S") Port Kembla plant (1975) and copper anode furnace slag at Copper
Refineries Limited (another subsidiary of MIM Holdings) in Townsville (1976) and of copper converter slag
in Mount Isa (1977).[17] The work then proceeded to smelting tin concentrates (1975) and then sulfidic tin
concentrates (1977).[17]
MIM and ER&S jointly funded the 1975 Port Kembla converter slag treatment trials and MIM’s
involvement continued with the slag treatment work in Townsville and Mount Isa.[21]
In parallel with the copper slag treatment work, the CSIRO was continuing to work in tin smelting. Projects
included a five tonne ("t") plant for recovering tin from slag being installed at Associated Tin Smelters in
1978, and the first sulfidic smelting test work being done in collaboration with Aberfoyle Limited, in which
tin was fumed from pyritic tin ore and from mixed tin and copper concentrates.[22] Aberfoyle was
investigating the possibility of using the Sirosmelt lance approach to improve the recovery of tin from
complex ores, such as its mine at Cleveland, Tasmania, and the Queen Hill ore zone near Zeehan in
Tasmania.[23][24]
The Aberfoyle work led to the construction and operation in late 1980 of a four t/h tin matte fuming pilot
plant at the Western Mining Corporation’s Kalgoorlie Nickel Smelter, located to the south of Kalgoorlie,
Western Australia.[24]
Many smelting companies were seeking new processes to replace sinter plants and blast furnaces.
Possibilities included the QSL lead smelting process, the Kivcet process, the Kaldo top-blown rotary
converter, and adapting Outokumpu’s successful copper and nickel flash furnace to lead smelting.[25]
MIM was seeking ways to safeguard the future of its Mount Isa lead smelting operations. It did this in two
ways:
1. working to improve the environmental and operational performance of its existing operations
2. investigating new technologies.[16]
MIM investigated new technologies by arranging plant testing of large parcels of Mount Isa lead
concentrates for all the then process options except for the Kivcet process. At the same time, it had been
aware of the use of top-jetting lances in the Mitsubishi and Kaldo processes, and of top-entry submerged
combustion lance investigations undertaken by ASARCO Limited (which had a long association with MIM,
including being a shareholder in MIM Holdings) in the 1960s. This stimulated MIM’s interest in the
Sirosmelt lance, which was seen as a way to produce a robust submerged lance.[16]
Following the copper slag trials of 1976–1978, MIM initiated a joint project with the CSIRO in 1978 to
investigate the possibility of applying Sirosmelt lances to lead smelting.[8]
The work began with computer modelling the equilibrium thermodynamics (1978) and was followed by
laboratory bench-scale test work using large alumina silicate crucibles (1978–1979). The results were
sufficiently encouraging that MIM built a 120 kg/h test rig in Mount Isa. It began operation in September
1980. This was used to develop a two-stage process to produce lead bullion from Mount Isa lead
concentrate. The first stage was an oxidation step that removed virtually all the sulfur from the feed,
oxidising the contained lead to lead oxide (PbO) that was largely collected in the slag (some was carried out
of the furnace as lead oxide fume that was returned for lead recovery). The second stage was a reduction
step in which the oxygen was removed from the lead to form lead metal.[8]
Following the 120 kg/h test work, MIM decided to proceed to install a 5 t/h lead ISASMELT pilot plant in
its Mount Isa lead smelter. It bought Aberfoyle’s matte fuming furnace and transported it from Kalgoorlie to
Mount Isa, where it was rebuilt and commissioned in 1983[17] to demonstrate the first stage of the process in
continuous operation and for testing the reduction step using batches of high-lead slag.[26]
One of the key features of the pilot plant was that it was run by operations’ personnel in the lead smelter as
though it was an operations’ plant.[16] The high lead slag produced by the continuous smelting of the lead
concentrate was subsequently treated in the sinter plant, thus increasing the production of the lead smelter
by up to 17%.[27] This gave the operations’ people ownership of the plant and an incentive to make it work,
thus ensuring management and maintenance priority. It also gave MIM assurance that the process simple
enough to be operable in a production environment, with normal staff and supervision, and that it was robust
enough to withstand normal control excursions.[16] In addition to the continuous operation of lead
concentrate to produce high-lead slag, the pilot plant was used to produce lead metal from batches of the
slag,[26] investigate the wear rates of the furnace’s refractory lining and lances, and initial work aimed at
developing a low-pressure version of the Sirosmelt lance. The result was a lance design that allowed
operation at significantly lower pressure than the initial values of about 250 kilopascal (gauge) ("kPag"),
thus reducing operating costs.[8]
MIM built a second, identical furnace next to the first, and commissioned it in August 1985. This
combination of furnaces was used to demonstrate the two-stage process in continuous operation in mid-
1987.[26] However, for most of the time the two furnaces were not able to operate simultaneously due to a
constraint in the capacity of the baghouse used to filter the lead dust from the waste gas.[26]
A series of process improvements, particularly in the waste gas handling system, resulted in increasing the
throughput of the plant from the initial design of 5 t/h to 10 t/h.[11] The pilot plant had treated more than
125,000 t of lead concentrate by April 1989.[13]
The two furnaces were also used to develop a process to recover lead from the Mount Isa lead smelter’s
drossing operations.[26]
Based on the results of the pilot plant work, the MIM Holdings Board of Directors approved the
construction of an A$65 million[28] demonstration plant, capable of producing 60,000 t/y of lead bullion.[26]
This plant operated from early 1991 until 1995.[29] It was initially designed to treat 20 t/h of lead
concentrate using lance air enriched to 27%. However, the oxygen originally designated for its use was
diverted to the more profitable copper smelting operations, and the feed rate to the lead ISASMELT
demonstration plant was severely restricted.[29] When there was sufficient oxygen available in 1993 to
increase the enrichment level to 33–35%, treatment rates of up to 36 t/h of concentrate were achieved, with
residual lead in the final reduction furnace slag being in the range of 2–5%.[29]
The two-stage approach to ISASMELT lead smelting was partly driven by the relatively low lead content of
Mount Isa lead concentrates (typically in the range of 47–52% lead during the lead ISASMELT
development period).[8][30][31] Trying to produce lead bullion in a single furnace with such low concentrate
grades would result in excessive fuming of lead oxide with a huge amount of material that would have to be
returned to the furnace to recover the lead[8] and, consequently, a higher energy demand as that material had
to be reheated to the furnace temperatures.
Concentrates with higher lead contents can be smelted directly into lead metal in a single furnace without
excess fuming.[8] This was demonstrated on the large scale in 1994, when 4000 t of concentrate containing
67% lead were treated at rates up to 32 t/h with lance air enriched to 27%. During these trials, 50% of the
lead in the concentrate was converted to lead bullion in the smelting furnace, while most of the rest ended up
as lead oxide in the smelting furnace slag.[29]
Like the lead ISASMELT pilot plant, the lead ISASMELT demonstration plant suffered from constraints
imposed by the waste gas handling system. In the case of the demonstration plant, the problem was caused
by sticky fume that formed an insulating layer on the convection tube bundles of the waste heat boilers,
significantly reducing the heat transfer rates and thus the ability of the boilers to reduce the waste gas
temperature.[13] As the plant used baghouses to filter lead fume from the waste gas, it was necessary to
reduce the temperature of the gas below the point at which the bags would be damaged by high
temperatures. The problem was solved by allowing cool air to mix with the hot waste gas to lower the
temperature to a level at which the baghouse could operate.[13] This reduced the ISASMELT plant’s
capacity because it was again limited by the volume of gas that could be filtered by the baghouse.
The lead ISASMELT demonstration plant was mothballed in 1995 because there was insufficient
concentrate to keep both it and the rest of the lead smelter operating.[13] It was too small to treat all the
Mount Isa lead concentrate by itself.
The ISASMELT–blast furnace combination was designed to treat 160,000 t/y of lead concentrate.[1]
The second commercial primary-lead ISASMELT furnace was commissioned at Kazzinc’s smelting
complex at Ust-Kamenogorsk in Kazakhstan in 2012. It is designed to treat 300,000 t/y of lead concentrate,
again using an ISASMELT–blast furnace combination.[1]
YCZG is constructing another lead ISASMELT at a new greenfield smelter in Huize in China, and this is
due to be commissioned in 2013.[1]
In June 2017, Glencore announced that Nyrstar NV had acquired an Isasmelt licence for its new Ausmelt
furnace in Port Pirie. As part of the agreement, Nyrstar engaged training and ramp-up support services for
the Ausmelt furnace and blast furnace by personnel from Glencore's Kazzinc operations in Kazakhstan. This
involved training Nyrstar personnel at Ust-Kamenogorsk operations and site support by Kazzinc personnel
during the commissioning and ramp-up stages of the Ausmelt plant.[33]
While the lead ISASMELT 5 t/h pilot plant was being designed in 1982–1983, MIM continued to use the
120 kg/h test rig to develop other processes, including the dross treatment process previously mentioned,
and the treatment of lead-acid battery paste for lead recycling.[8]
The MIM Holdings Board of Directors approved the construction of an ISASMELT plant at Britannia
Refined Metals, the company’s lead refinery at Northfleet in the United Kingdom, for commercial recovery
of lead from battery paste to supplement the existing plant, which used a short rotary furnace to produce
10,000 t/y of lead.[34] The new plant increased annual production to 30,000 t/y of recycled lead, and was
commissioned in 1991.[34] The ISASMELT furnace was used to produce low-antimony lead bullion from
the battery paste and an antimony-rich slag that contained 55–65% lead oxide. While it was possible to
recover the lead from the slag in the ISASMELT furnace by a reduction step, the total throughput of the
plant was increased by treating the slag in the short rotary furnace when sufficient quantities of the slag had
been generated.[34] The plant was designed to treat 7.7 t/h of battery paste, but routinely treated 12 t/h.[34]
The plant was shut down in 2004 when Xstrata Zinc, which took over the MIM Holdings lead operations,
decided to leave the lead recycling business.[34]
A second lead ISASMELT plant for recovering lead from recycled batteries was commissioned in 2000 in
Malaysia at Metal Reclamation Industries’ Pulau Indah plant.[34] This ISASMELT plant has a design
capacity of 40,000 t/y of lead bullion.[1]
The results of this work were sufficiently encouraging that MIM in 1983[36] undertook its own copper
smelting test work program using its 120 kg/h test rig, which had by then been rerated to 250 kg/h.[28] It was
found that the process was easy to control and that copper loss to slag was low.[11] It was also learned that
the process could easily recover copper from copper converter slag concentrate, of which there was a large
stockpile at Mount Isa.[11]
Construction of a 15 t/h demonstration copper ISASMELT plant began in 1986. The design was based on
MIM’s 250 kg/h test work and operating experience with the lead ISASMELT pilot plant.[28] It cost A$11
million[11] and was commissioned in April 1987.[28] The initial capital cost was recovered in the first 14
months of operation.[27]
As with the lead ISASMELT pilot plant, the copper ISASMELT demonstration plant was integrated into
copper smelter operations[16] and justified by the 20% (30,000 t/y) increase in copper production that it
provided.[11] It quickly treated the entire backlog of converter slag concentrate, which could not be treated at
high rates in the reverberatory furnaces without generating magnetite ("Fe3O4") accretions that would
necessitate shutting down the reverberatory furnaces for their removal.[37]
The demonstration copper ISASMELT plant was used to further develop the copper process. Refractory life
was initially shorter than expected[38] and considerable effort was devoted to understanding the reasons and
attempting to extend the life of the refractories.[38] At the end of the life of the demonstration plant, the
longest refractory life achieved was 90 weeks.[38]
Lance life was also low initially.[38] Inexperienced operators could destroy a lance in as little as 10
minutes.[38] However, as a result of modifications to the lance design, the development of techniques to
determine the position of the lance in the bath, and a rise in the operating experience, the typically lance life
was extended to a week.[38]
The demonstration plant was commissioned with high-pressure (700 kPag) air injected down the lance.[28]
Later, after extensive testing of low-pressure lance designs and trials using oxygen enrichment of the lance
air, a 70 t/d oxygen plant and a 5 Nm3/s blower with a discharge pressure of 146 kPag were purchased.[28]
The new lance design was capable of operating at pressures below 100 kPag.[36] Using enrichment of the
oxygen in the lance air to 35%, the demonstration plant throughput was lifted to 48 t/h of concentrate, and
the gross energy used during smelting was reduced from 25.6 GJ/t of contained copper to 4.1 GJ/t.[28]
The successful operation and development of the demonstration copper ISASMELT, and the degree of
interest shown in the new process by the global smelting community, gave MIM Holdings sufficient
confidence to license the ISASMELT technology to external companies,[39] so an agreement under which
MIM could incorporate the Sirosmelt lance into ISASMELT technology was signed with the CSIRO in
1989.[27]
The Agip ISASMELT plant was designed to treat 7.5 t/h of the Radio Hill concentrate and produce 1.5 t/h of
granulated matte with a combined nickel and copper content of 45% for sale.,[27][28] It was the same size as
the copper ISASMELT demonstration plant (2.3 m internal diameter) and had a 5.5 Nm3/s blower to
provide the lance air.[27] Commissioning of the plant began in September 1991;[13] however, the Radio Hill
mine and smelter complex were forced to close by low nickel prices after less than six months,[13] before
commissioning was completed.[28] The ISASMELT furnace achieved its design capacity within three
months.[13] Subsequent owners of the mine focussed on mining and mineral processing only, and the
ISASMELT plant has been dismantled.[13]
In 1973, the Freeport-McMoRan Copper and Gold Inc. ("Freeport") smelter at Miami, Arizona, installed a
51 MW electric furnace at its Miami smelter. The decision was based on a long-term electrical power
contract with the Salt River Project that provided the company with a very low rate for electricity.[9] This
contract expired in 1990 and the resulting increase in electricity prices prompted the then owners of the
smelter, Cyprus Miami Mining Corporation ("Cyprus"), to seek alternative smelting technologies to provide
lower operating costs.[9]
The Contop, Inco, Mitsubishi and Outokumpu processes "were all eliminated primarily because of their high
dust levels, high capital costs and poor adaptability to the existing facility". The Teniente converter was
ruled out because it required the use of the electric furnace for partial smelting. The Noranda reactor was not
selected "because of its high refractory wear and its poor adaptability to the existing plant due to the
handling of the reactor slag".[9] ISASMELT was chosen as the preferred technology and a licence agreement
was signed with MIM in October 1990. The major factor in the decision to select the ISASMELT
technology was the ability to fit it into the existing plant and to maximise the use of existing equipment and
infrastructure, while the major disadvantage was seen to be the risks associated with scaling up the
technology from the Mount Isa demonstration plant.[9]
The Miami copper ISASMELT furnace was designed to treat 590,000 t/y (650,000 short tons per year) of
copper concentrate, a treatment rate that was constrained by the capacity of the sulfuric acid plant used to
capture the sulfur dioxide from the smelter’s waste gases.[9] The existing electric furnace was converted
from smelting duties to a slag cleaning furnace and providing matte surge capacity for the converters.[9] The
ISASMELT furnace was commissioned on 11 June 1992 and in 2002 treated over 700,000 t/y of
concentrate.[40] The modernisation of the Miami smelter cost an estimated US$95 million.[28]
In 1993, the Cyprus Minerals Company merged with AMAX to form the Cyprus Amax Minerals company,
which was in turn taken over by the Phelps Dodge Corporation in late 1999. Phelps Dodge was acquired by
Freeport in 2006.
The Miami smelter is one of only three remaining operating copper smelters in the United States, where
there were 16 in 1979.[41]
The third commercial copper ISASMELT plant was installed in MIM’s Mount Isa copper smelter at a cost of
approximately A$100 million.[38] It was designed to treat 104 t/h of copper concentrate, containing 180,000
t/y of copper, and it began operation in August 1992.[38]
A significant difference between the Mount Isa copper ISASMELT plant and all the others is that it uses an
Ahlstrom Fluxflow® waste heat boiler[42] to recover heat from the furnace waste gas. This boiler uses a
recirculating fluid bed of particles to rapidly quench the gas as it leaves the furnace, and then uses the
enhanced heat transfer properties of solid–solid contact to cool the particles as they are carried past boiler
tubes that are suspended in a shaft above the bed.[38] The high heat transfer rate means that the Fluxflow®
boiler is relatively compact compared with conventional waste heat boilers and the rapid cooling of the
waste gas limits the formation of sulfur trioxide ("SO3"), which in the presence of water forms sulfuric acid
that can cause corrosion of cool surfaces.[43]
In the early years of operation, the Fluxflow® boiler was the cause
of significant down time, because the rate of wear of the boiler tubes
was much higher than expected.[43] The problems were solved by
understanding the gas flows within the boiler redesigning the boiler
tubes to minimise the effects of erosion.[43]
In the first years of operation at Mount Isa, the throughput of the ISASMELT furnace was constrained by
problems with some of the ancillary equipment in the plant, including the boiler, slag granulation system and
concentrate filters.[44] The ultimate constraint was the decision during its construction to keep one of the
two reverberatory furnaces on line to increase the copper smelter production to 265,000 t/y of anode copper.
The smelter’s Peirce-Smith converters became a bottleneck and the feed rate of the ISASMELT furnace had
to be restrained to allow sufficient matte to be drawn from the reverberatory furnace to prevent it freezing
solid.[3] The ISASMELT 12-month rolling average of the feed rate fell just short of 100 t/h for much of this
period, not quite reaching the design annual average of 104 t/h.[44] MIM decided to shut down the
reverberatory furnace in 1997, and the ISASMELT plant 12-month rolling mean feed rate quickly exceeded
the 104 t/h design when this constraint was lifted.[44]
The performance of the ISASMELT plant was sufficiently encouraging that MIM decided to expand the
ISASMELT treatment rate to 166 t/h by adding a second oxygen plant to allow higher enrichment of the
lance air.[44] As a result, by late 2001 it had achieve a peak rate of 190 t/h of concentrate, and the smelter
produced a peak annual total of 240,000 t of anode copper.[44] At that time, the Mount Isa copper smelter,
together with its copper refinery in Townsville, was among the lowest cost copper smelters in the world.
Lance life is typically two weeks, with lance changes taking 30 to 40 minutes, and repairs usually being
limited to replacement of the lance tips.[47]
In 2006, MIM commissioned a second rotary holding furnace that operates in parallel with the existing
holding furnace.[48]
Sterlite Industries ("Sterlite"), now a subsidiary of Vedanta Resources plc ("Vedanta"), built a copper smelter
in Tuticorin using an ISASMELT furnace and Peirce-Smith converters. The smelter was commissioned in
1996[1] and was designed to produce 60,000 t/y of copper (450,000 t/y of copper concentrate),[45] but by
increasing the oxygen content of the lance air and making modifications to other equipment, the ISASMELT
furnace feed rate was increased to the point where the smelter was producing 180,000 t/y of copper.[13]
Sterlite commissioned a new ISASMELT furnace in May 2005[48] that was designed to treat 1.3 million t/y
of copper concentrate,[45] and the smelter’s production capacity was expanded to 300,000 t/y of copper.[13]
The new plant reached its design capacity, measured over a three-month period, six months after it started
treating its first feed.[48] Vedanta’s website states that the new ISASMELT furnace was successfully ramped
up "in a record period of 45 days".[49]
Since then Sterlite has decided to further expand its copper production by installing a third ISASMELT
smelter and new refinery using IsaKidd technology.[50] The new smelter will have a design capacity of 1.36
million t/y of copper concentrate (containing 400,000 t/y of copper), processed through a single ISASMELT
furnace.[51]
In the 1990s, the Chinese government decided to increase the efficiency of the Chinese economy and reduce
the environmental effects of heavy industry by modernising plants.[10] As a response, the Yunnan Copper
Corporation Limited ("YCC") upgraded its existing plant, which was based on a sinter plant and an electric
furnace, with a copper ISASMELT furnace.[10] As with the Miami smelter, the electric furnace was
converted from smelting duty to separation of matte and slag and providing matte surge capacity for the
converters, and again, the small footprint of the ISASMELT furnace was very important in retrofitting it to
the existing smelter.[10]
The YCC ISASMELT plant had a design capacity of 600,000 dry t/y of copper concentrate and started
smelting concentrate on 15 May 2002.[10] YCC placed a lot of emphasis on training its operators, sending
people to Mount Isa for training over a seven-month period during 2001 ahead of the ISASMELT
commissioning.[10] The total cost of the smelter modernisation program, including the ISASMELT furnace,
was 640 million yuan (approximately US$80 million) and the smelter’s concentrate treatment rate increased
from 470,000 t/y to 800,000 t/y as a result.[52]
The transfer of operating knowledge from MIM to YCC was sufficient for the first ISASMELT furnace
refractory lining to last for two years, a marked improvement on the life of the initial lining of other
plants.[52]
YCC described the modernisation project as "a great success, achieving all that was expected."[52] Energy
consumption per tonne of blister copper produced decreased by 34% as a result of installing the ISASMELT
furnace, and YCC estimated that during the first 38 months of operation, it saved approximately US$31.4
million through reduced energy costs alone,[52] giving the modernisation a very short payback by industry
standards.
In 2004, YCC’s management was presented with awards for Innovation in Project Management and the
National Medal for High Quality Projects by the Chinese government to mark the success of the smelter
modernisation project.[52]
Xstrata subsequently licensed YCC to build three more ISASMELT plants, one in Chuxiong in Yunnan
Province, China to treat 500,000 t/y of copper concentrate, one in Liangshan in Sichuan Province, China[1]
and the other in Chambishi in Zambia to treat 350,000 t/y of concentrate.[1] Chuxiong and Chambishi were
commissioned in 2009.[1] Liangshan was commissioned in 2012.[2]
Mopani Copper Mines ("Mopani") was part of Zambia Consolidated Copper Mines Limited until it was
privatised in 2000. It owns the Mufulira smelter, which operated with an electric furnace with a nominal
capacity of 420,000 t/y of copper concentrate (180,000 t/y of new copper).[53] Mopani decided to install a
copper ISASMELT plant that could treat 850,000 t/y of copper concentrate, including a purpose-designed
electric matte settling furnace to separate the ISASMELT matte and slag and also return slag from the
smelter’s Peirce-Smith converters.[53]
Before committing to the ISASMELT technology, Mopani considered the following process options:
an electric furnace
a flash furnace, including one operating direct-to-blister
the Mitsubishi smelting process
the Teniente converter
the Noranda reactor
an Ausmelt furnace
an ISASMELT furnace.[53]
Mopani considered electric furnaces unproven at the proposed concentrate feed rates, and the low sulfur
dioxide concentration in the waste gas would make its capture very expensive.[53] Flash furnaces and the
Mitsubishi process were excluded because:
they were considered too technically complex for the Zambian environment
they were not well suited for retrofitting to the Mufulira smelter
they had a high capital cost associated with them.[53]
Mopani excluded the Teniente converter and Noranda reactor because of the poor performance of the
Teniente converter at the other Zambian smelter operating at the time and because of "the relatively
inexperienced technical resources available at the time".[53]
Mopani selected ISASMELT technology over Ausmelt technology after visits to operating plants in
Australia, the United States of America, and China.[53] The total cost of the project was US$213 million.
The first feed was smelted in September 2006.[54]
Southern Peru Copper Corporation
The Southern Peru Copper Corporation ("SPCC") is a subsidiary of the Southern Copper Corporation
("SCC"), one of the world’s largest copper companies[55] and currently 75.1% owned by Grupo México.
Grupo México acquired the shares in SPCC when it bought ASARCO in November 1999[15]
In the 1990s, SPCC was seeking to modernise its smelter at Ilo in southern Peru as part of 1997 commitment
to the Peruvian government to capture at least 91.7% of the sulfur dioxide generated in its smelting
operations by January 2007.[55] It initially selected flash smelting technology to replace its reverberatory
furnaces, at a cost of almost US$1 billion;[15] however, one of the first actions following Grupo México’s
acquisition of ASARCO was to review the proposed Ilo smelter modernisation plans.[15]
Six different technologies were evaluated during the review. These were:
The ISASMELT technology was selected as a result of the review, resulting in a reduction in the capital cost
of almost 50% and was also the alternative with the lowest operating costs.[15]
The plant was commissioned in February 2007.[56] In June 2009, the plant had an average feed rate of 165.2
t/h of concentrate and 6.3 t/h of reverts (cold copper-bearing materials that arise from spillage and accretions
in the pots used to transport matte or other molten materials).[51]
SPCC has reported a cost of approximately $600 million for the smelter modernization.[57]
Kazzinc
Kazzinc selected the copper ISASMELT process for its Ust-Kamenogorsk metallurgical complex. It is
designed to treat 290,000 t/y of copper concentrate[1] and was commissioned in 2011.[58] A projected capital
cost for the smelter and refinery in 2006 was US$178 million.[59]
In the fourth quarter of 2011, the First Quantum Minerals board approved the construction of an
ISASMELT-based smelter at Kansanshi in Zambia.[60] The smelter is to process 1.2 million t/y of copper
concentrate to produce over 300,000 t/y of copper and 1.1 million t/y of sulfuric acid as a by-product.[60]
Construction is expected to be completed by mid-2014,[61] and the capital cost is estimated at US$650
million.[62] The estimated operating cost was given as US$69 per tonne of concentrate.[62]
The Kansanshi copper smelter project is estimated to be worth US$340–500 million per year in reduced
concentrate freight costs, export duties and sulfuric acid costs.[60]
Umicore N.V.
In the early 1990s, technical personnel from the then Union Miniére worked with MIM Holdings personnel
to develop an ISASMELT-based process to treat scrap materials and residues containing copper and lead.[39]
Union Miniére operated a smelter at Hoboken, near Antwerpen in Belgium, that specialised in recycling
scrap non-ferrous materials. The test work program was undertaken using an ISASMELT test rig at MIM
Holdings’ lead refinery, Britannia Refined Metals, at Northfleet in the United Kingdom.[39]
A demonstration plant was designed by MIM Holdings personnel and operated for several months at the
Hoboken smelter site.[63] The new smelter was commissioned in the final quarter of 1997[39] and in 2007
was treating up to 300,000 t/y of secondary materials.[63] The installation of the ISASMELT furnace
replaced "a large number of unit processes" and substantially reduced operating costs at the Hoboken
smelter.[48]
Umicore’s Hoboken plant uses a two-step process in a single furnace. The first step involves the oxidation of
the feed to form a copper matte and a lead-rich slag. The slag is then tapped and the remaining copper matte
is then converted to blister copper.[63] The lead-rich slag is subsequently reduced in a blast furnace to
produce lead metal, while the copper is refined and the contained precious metals recovered.[63]
Aurubis AG
The then Hüttenwerke Kayser smelter at Lünen in Germany installed an ISASMELT plant in 2002 to replace
three blast furnaces and one Peirce-Smith converter used for smelting scrap copper.[63] The company was
subsequently bought by Norddeutsche Affinerie AG, which in turn became Aurubis AG.
The process used at the Lünen smelter involves charging the furnace with copper residues and scrap
containing between 1 and 80% copper and then melting it in a reducing environment. This produces a "black
copper phase" and a low-copper silica slag. Initially the black copper was converted to blister copper in the
ISASMELT furnace.[63] However, in 2011 the smelter was expanded as part of the "KRS Plus" project. A
top-blown rotary converter is now used to convert the black copper and the ISASMELT furnace runs
continuously in smelting mode.[64][65]
The installation of the ISASMELT furnace increased the overall copper recovery in the plant by reducing
losses to slag, reduced the number of furnaces in operation, decreased the waste gas volume, and decreased
energy consumption by more than 50%. The production capacity exceeds the original design by 40%.[63]
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