kjavanb123 said:
Harold,
Please advise adding soda ash to silica and heat in furnace would change the melting temp? Because before we used to just melt the soil with heavy metals, and silica. then add some lead sulfide in process to remove the melted silica which stayed at the top, and bottom would represent all the heavy metals.
Now I hope adding soda ash would decrease the melting temp, as silica melts at 750 celsious, is that true?
Thanks
I'm not a chemist, so I may say something that's not exactly correct, so please bear with me.
To my knowledge, silica melts @ 1405 C. When it is heated in the presence of soda ash, the soda ash dissolves the silica, resulting in common glass, which will melt at a much lower temperature. I do not know the exact temperature, which is likely a function of the ratio of silica to soda ash, perhaps with other constituents modifying the results.
I read your comment on the price of soda ash, and would suggest that it would be very expensive, although I am sure that if you bought it in large quantities the price would come down appreciably.
I think the point here is that if you do not have alternate methods to recover the values, and are forced to recover them by furnace, that would be an example of ways to proceed. In my case, cost was not an issue in that the 500 pounds of soda ash I had to buy resulted in the recovery of over 200 troy ounces of gold, more than that amount of silver, along with a substantial amount of platinum and palladium.
Processing a low grade ore would likely be a different matter.
Sorry I'm not more help. This subject is way over my head. I don't know of companies that suggest processes, so I'm no help there, either.
Harold