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DKL Engineering, Inc.
Handbook of Sulphuric Acid Manufacturing
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Acid Plant Database July 6, 2015
Owner | Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc. | |||
Location |
Dos Pobres Copper Mine Graham County Safford, Arizona USA |
|||
Background | - | |||
Website |
www.fcx.com www.phelpsdodge.com |
|||
Plant | - | |||
Coordinates | 32° 55' 49" N, 109° 42' 14" W | |||
Type of Plant | Sulphur Burning | |||
Gas Source | Elemental Sulphur | |||
Plant Capacity | Original
Nameplate:
1250
MTPD |
|||
SA/DA | 3/1 DA | |||
Emissions | SO2:
< 20 ppmv Emissions achieved using a DynaWave caustic tailgas scrubber |
|||
Status | Operating | |||
Year Built | 2011 | |||
Technology | MECS | |||
Contractor | Aker/Jacobs | |||
Remarks | Reported project
cost US$150 million Bed 4: Cesium Catalyst Blower: Electric Motor, Toshiba VFD Acid Transfer: 3 mile pipe line, 500 ft elevation change, 3 in-line pumpe, 98.5% H2SO4, pump discharge pressure = 460 psi |
|||
Permits |
Arizona Department of Environmental Quality
www.azdeq.gov
Facility ID: Air Quality Class I Permit |
|||
Permit No. | Issue Date | Expiry Date | Details | |
- | - | - | - | |
Pictures | ||||
General |
There are plenty of aspects to consider when
building a $150 million sulfuric acid plant. However, for owner
Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold, the No. 1 priority during construction of
the 50,000-square-foot production facility adjacent to its open-pit copper
mine in Safford, Ariz., is the safety of the more than 800 workers who will
man this job at the height of the construction schedule. “It is a
challenge trying to manage a large group like that safely and efficiently,”
says David Simmons, project manager for Freeport-McMoRan. Add a
fast-track schedule and a job site with limited space to the mix and you get
a project that would have most contractors scratching their heads about how
to pull it off. However, with an experienced company like Jacobs Engineering
on the job as the engineering, procurement and construction manager, the
project was delivered within budget and on time in April 2011. The
sulfur-burning plant is a key component of the Dos Pobres copper mine in
Safford. The high-efficiency facility supports the copper leach-and-recovery
process; sulfuric acid is required to recover copper from raw ore. To
keep up with the 1,550 tons of copper ore per day produced by the mine, the
sulfur plant has the capacity to produce approximately 500,000 tons of acid
annually. The plant sits on a 10-acre site with an enclosed building that
houses the control room directly behind it. The main facility contains
5,000-horsepower main compressors, a catalytic converter, gas-to-gas heat
exchangers, absorber columns and associated process controls, according to
Simmons. SAFETY FIRST MAJOR CHANGES |
|||
References | Sulfuric Acid Today - Freeport-McMoRan Answers Call for Copper with New Acid Plant, Spring/Summer 2012 | |||
News | September 16,
2011
September 29, 2010 -
The sulphur burner at the Freeport-McMoRan copper mine at Safford is
approximately 35 percent complete.
The construction of the facility is on schedule, and completion is expected
in the late first quarter or early in the second quarter of 2011, Freeport
spokesman Richard Peterson said in an e-mail to the Courier.
Peterson also said about 170 contracted construction workers are on-site.
That number is expected to increase to about 250 later this year.
“The construction crews have been very safety conscious, working 92,000
man-hours with no (time lost to injuries) and only one reportable injury,”
Peterson said. “Also, a
milestone was recently achieved when the 15-megawatt steam turbine was set
into place. It will drive a generator to produce electricity.”
Peterson said in April the electricity produced is more than what is needed
to operate the sulphur burner. The extra wattage will be used to support
part of the electricity needed for the Safford mine.
The sulphur burner will produce sulfuric acid, which is required in copper
recovery from raw ore. Until
the sulphur burner is complete, trucks will still deliver sulphuric acid to
the Safford mine. Even after
the sulphur burner is in operation, the mine will require delivery of
sulphuric acid, although the number of deliveries will be reduced, Paul Cook
of Freeport told members of the Local Emergency Planning Committee last
month. September 3, 2010 - Sulfuric acid produced at Freeport-McMoRan's Safford mine will probably remain on site and the mine will require additional acid to be shipped in, members of the Local Emergency Planning Committee recently learned. Paul Cook of Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold presented information about the dangers of sulphuric acid during the Aug. 26 LEPC meeting. According to Cook, trucks carrying concentrated sulfuric acid bear signs with the numerals 1830 on them. Some of these trucks will remain on the highways because the sulfur plant at the Safford mine will not produce enough acid for the mine and more will have to be trucked to the site. It is also unlikely that acid produced at the Safford mine will be shipped elsewhere. April 28, 2010 - Freeport-McMoRan is ramping up activity at two Arizona mining operations. It will begin construction on a sulphur burning plant at the Dos Pobres Copper mine in Safford. The plant will produce sulfuric acid, which is used to extract copper from ore. The $150 million project had been delayed for 16 months. It's expected to provide about 250 jobs during construction. The plant should be operational in 2011. Freeport-McMoRan is also raising production at its Morenci mine and hiring 400 workers to meet demand. More than 1,500 jobs were cut in Morenci in 2008 and 2009 as demand for copper fell and dragged prices down from record highs. April 25, 2010 - After a 16-month delay, Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold will move ahead with construction of a sulphur-burning plant at the Dos Pobres copper mine at Safford. The sulphur burner will produce sulfuric acid, which is required in copper recovery from raw ore. While the sulphur burner is expected to require few new permanent employees, about 250 construction employees will work on the project at its peak, according to Freeport spokesman Richard Peterson. He did not specify how long the project’s “peak” period will be. The Arizona Department of Environmental Quality approved revisions of Freeport’s air quality permit in the fall of 2008 to allow construction of the sulphur burner. Freeport shelved the project in December 2008 in response to declining economic conditions in the copper industry and the United States economy as a whole. The project is expected to cost approximately $150 million. Completion of the “highly automated plant” is expected in about a year, Peterson said in an e-mail response to questions from the Courier. “The plant will burn elemental sulphur that will be brought by railcar to a transfer facility that will be built southeast of Fort Thomas. Sulphur will be transferred from the railcars to trucks for transportation to the sulphur burning plant,” Peterson said. Although there will be an average of 18 trucks a day, the transport plan is expected to reduce overall track traffic on Highway 70 because every truck of elemental sulphur will replace two trucks of acid, according to Peterson. He also said the plant will have a capacity of approximately 465,000 tons of sulfuric acid per year. Waste heat from the sulphur burner will be used to produce 15 megawatts of electric power.This is 10 more than needed to operate the acid plant. The remainder will be used to support part of the electricity demand from the Safford mine. |
MTPD - Metric Tonne per Day
STPD - Short Ton per Day
MTPA - Metric Tonne per Annum STPA - Short Ton per
Annum
SA - Single Absorption
DA - Double Absorption
* Coordinates can be used to
locate plant on Google Earth