ANODE-STIFFENING DEVICE AND STIFFENING SYSTEM THAT USES SAID DEVICE
An anode stiffening device that avoids the occurrence of short-circuits produced between anodes and cathodes during electrodepositing processes, wherein said device comprises a rigid monolithic body of side inclined walls configuring a triangular-shaped cross-section that is wider in its rear portion, where said side inclined walls join in the front portion of the device, forming a fit area arranged to receive the peripheral edge of an electrode tightly, preferably of an anode and making it stiff in its whole extension and separating it from the adjacent electrodes.
The present application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. application Ser. No. 14/906,545, filed Jan. 20, 2016, which is a U.S. National Stage entry under 35 U.S.C. § 371 of International Application No. PCT/CL2014/000030, filed Jun. 19, 2014, which claims the benefit of Chilean Application No. 2099-2013, filed Jul. 22, 2013.
FIELDThis application refers to an anode straightening, separating and stiffening system, including at least one stiffening device, preferably plastic, that improves the quality and increases the production of metallic cathodes obtained from electrolytic processes, thus avoiding the short-circuits that influence on the formation of nodulations on the cathode surface. In addition, said system and device installed along the sides of each anode increases the efficiency of the electric current and extends the time of use of anodes, thus settling part of the issues existing in the electrolytic processes.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONIt is known that during the electrolytic processes to produce metallic cathodes, for example by electrolytic refining and electro-winning, anode plates are used, which are initially flat, straight or vertical. Said anodes, mainly manufactured in lead or in any other proper material for the process, undergo degradation due to the corrosive action of the hot acid electrolyte where they are immersed. In this context, during the operation of an electrolytic cell, the anodes oxidize, with the anode becoming thinner from the gradual release of the oxide formed on its surface. Then, by losing thickness, the properties of the anodic plates change, such as their mechanic properties, being liable to strain, for example concave buckling, losing its original verticality.
The anode strain results in an inefficient operation thereof, because a strained anode tends to reduce its separation, or simply to join to one or both adjacent cathodes. Said separation or contact reduction facilitates the production of short-circuits in the cathodes to be harvested, which give rise to nodules, malformations or “grains”, thus resulting in losses in the production of cathodes due to nodulation and efficiency loss of the current.
In addition, once the degradation and straining conditions of the anode occur, corrosion increases and also the plate thinning. This produces greater strains and an even greater loss in the production of cathodes and the efficiency of current. This degradation process of the anode results in the corners of the anode plates beginning to bend even more—due to their thinning—until the change of the anode plate or plates affected becomes necessary.
In this context, the anodes currently used in the electric refining or electro-winning processes become corroded, thinned and strained due to use and corrosion from the hot acid electrolyte, thus losing verticality and, as a consequence, generating micro-circuits due to the approaching thereof to one or both adjacent cathodes. This result in nodulations or grains in the electrodeposited plates, with the current losing efficiency and the plates harvested being rejected due to nodulation, added to the fact that anode degradation enhances with greater use. Many times this forces to the early replacement of the anode or group of anodes affected.
In this context, several solutions have tried to improve the properties of the anode in order to reduce the effects the electrolytic means has on said component. Then, anodes have been designed with titanium alloys or other materials that—although increasing the useful lives thereof—make their use much more expensive. Therefore, a solution is required allowing to increasing the anode's useful life, no matter its composition, while reducing the effects from its degradation on the production and quality of cathodes.
In this respect, there are methods destined to stiffen new anodes, such as that described in the application for the patent of invention CL 778-1996. Said application describes a method where, through big-sized machines such as hydraulic presses, figures are stamped by a great mechanic pressure applied on the whole surface of the anode, printing several patterns in the plates that make them stiff. Then, when said plates come into operation, they remain stiff for a longer period of time than a plate without being stamped, thus being the issue stated above partially settled. A great disadvantage, however, of the solution proposed by the application CL 778-1996 is that, once corrosion of one or both anodes starts, they lose thickness, with the strain or buckling of them being inevitable and the problems already stated being triggered, i.e., cathodes of poor quality being produced, efficiency of current lost and, consequently, the corresponding rejection of cathodes due to nodulation.
Another kind of solutions being found in the state of the art corresponds to huge systems of the size of the electrolytic cell, where said systems separate the anodes from cathodes in an equidistant way, using gutter-shaped guides for the anodes and cathodes to displace vertically. Said guiding devices—applied when the mother cathodes do not use edge strips, operate well when the anodes and cathodes are perfectly vertical, i.e. when they are new. However, when anodes start to be used, they begin to become corrode, to lose thickness and to become strained as already stated, with the same occurring in mother cathodes. Then, when the removal of strained anodes and/or cathodes is required, the displacement guides turn into an obstacle making the operation inefficient, because the strain of electrodes due to their use hinders the slipping thereof along said guides. The disadvantages of this system, therefore, are their high cost of implementation, added to the guiding channels not straightening or stiffening the anodes when they become strained. In this context, a solution is required that out of giving stiffness to anodes, allows that both cathodes and anodes can be removed and introduced into the cell without interruptions.
In addition, in several documents, such as in U.S. Pat. No. 5,762,776, CL 46009, U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,619,751 and 3,997,421, separating and/or isolating devices are described located on the surface of the anode, both in the lower third thereof, on its sides, in the central part or in a combination of the previous positions, thus allowing to keeping a specific separation between anodes and cathodes, reducing both the risk of short-circuits and the loss of current efficiency. Said devices are installed in the anodes, so that to provide contact and sliding surfaces keeping a uniform distance between the adjacent anodes and cathodes, out of facilitating the introduction and removal of electrodes during the common operations performed in the electrolytic systems. However, when corrosion, and the resulting thinning and strain of anodes begin, said devices only allow to mitigating the effects of buckling, i.e. without making the anodes stiff; therefore, short-circuits equally produce when the anodes degrade and, consequently, strain.
As derived from the above, in order to reduce strain, increase the quality and production of cathodes, with them being free of nodulations, as well as to increase the efficiency of the current and increase the useful life of the anode, keeping anodes vertical is necessary, as well as ensuring the maximum distance between the anode and the cathode along its full length. However, the traditional separation systems do not consider how to avoid the buckling of anodes in an integral form, only limiting to mitigate the buckling effects with the use of separators as a secondary objective. An example of the above is that the percentage of rejections of cathodes electro won with these systems of separation is within a range of 4 to 7%, which are undesirable factors for the high rates of production managed at present.
Therefore, the main problem solved by this invention is to straight and stiff anodes by keeping them vertical, avoiding buckling and, also, being able to keep the greatest distance between the anode and the cathode along the full length in an equidistant way, with the percentage of rejections due to nodulations being reduced to 1 and 2% and, therefore, improving the quality and production of cathodes.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTIONAs already stated, the devices known in the art do not allow to solving the problems from the strain of the anodic plates integrally, i.e. keeping the anodes stiff and totally vertical, while an equidistant separation between them and the cathodes exists, thus avoiding short-circuits and the formation of nodulations that affect the quality and production of electro-won electrodes.
To address this issue, the present invention proposes a system and a device to straighten and stiffen anodes during its use, while keeping the separation thereof with respect to the adjacent cathodes, thus avoiding the short-circuits that cause the nodulations. This system consists in implementing at least one stiffening device, having a stiff, elongated, monolithic body, preferably plastic, installed along a great portion of the peripheral edges of an anode, preferably along the side walls of the anodic plates, wherein said device has an inner rectangular section that produces a tight fit to the thickness of the anodic plate in most length thereof, at least above 50% on its greater side, allowing to straightening and stiffening said plate. In addition, the external shape of the invention's device—that mainly consists in two inclined planes forming a “V”—out of giving stiffness to the anode allows to efficiently separating the anode from the cathode, avoiding the micro-shortcircuits totally, i.e. separating and stiffening at the same time the anodic plates. In addition, the device has other characteristics that favor electrodepositing, as well as facilitating the operation of electrodes during their use.
As a result from these characteristics, the stiffening system and device of the invention allows to solving the issues of the prior art thanks to the reduction of the micro-shortcircuits generated by nodulations, having an influence on an increased efficiency of the electrolytic cells of at least 2%, this making it possible the production of more high quality cathodes, without nodulations.
The most important advantage of the invention, as compared with the state of the art, is that the characteristics of the system and device cause the increase of production and quality of the cathodes harvested by 3% to 5%, as well as an increase in the efficiency of current of at least 2%, added to the extension of the useful life of anodes by at least 20%, which are factors with high incidence on electrodepositing.
For a better explanation of the invention, a description will be provided for a preferred embodiment with respect to figures, where:
The present invention consists in a stiffening device and its incorporation to a stiffening system allowing to stiffening and keeping an anodic plate straight in its whole extension, while allowing keeping equidistant separation along the whole anode with respect to adjacent cathodes. Said system and device allows to reducing the formation of nodulations in the electric cathodes deposited by avoiding the formation of short-circuits originating in the reduces separation between anode and cathode, in addition to increasing the useful life of anodes by preventing their strain from the on-going degradation they are subject to during the operation in the electrolytic means.
In
On the other hand, the embodiment of the invention according to
Finally, an embodiment of the stiffened device according to the embodiment, as well as of the system incorporating at least one of those devices, has a lower spring of triangular shape, preferably incorporated to the device, which has a basis that, depending on the dimensions of the electrolytic cell, gets in contact with the bottom of said cell, offering higher stability to the anodes. In addition, said lower support has inclined walls destined to benefit the installation and deinstallation of the adjacent cathodes, preventing them to hit the lower portion of the anode.
According to the previous descriptions, any of the embodiments already presented of the stiffening device and, therefore, of the stiffening system, consisting for example in a combination of one or more characteristics as shown above and/or any component known in the art, is considered within the protection scope of this application.
Claims
1. An anode stiffening device comprising a rigid monolithic body of inclined side walls formed by symmetrical panels inclined towards the front portion of the device, configuring a V-shaped triangular cross-section that is wider in its rear portion, wherein said inclined side walls join in the front portion of the device forming a fit area arranged to tightly receive the peripheral edge of at least one greater side of an anode, wherein the fit area and the rear portion of the device comprise a longitudinal extension of at least 50% of the length of the greater side of the anode where the device is installed, making it stiff in its whole extension and separating it from the adjacent electrodes.
2. The device according to claim 1, characterized in that the fit area extends along most of the front extension of the device.
3. The device according to claim 1, characterized in that there are fastening holes located in the fit area along the extension of said area, that allow fastening the anode housed in said fit area thanks to fastening means.
4. The device according to claim 1, characterized in that the fit area projects from the joining of the inclined side walls to the outside of the device.
5. The device according to claim 1, characterized in that the fit area has a bore or groove located within the side walls of the device.
6. The device according to claim 1, characterized in that at least one of its ends comprises inclined planes arranged over the inclined side walls that facilitate the sliding regarding adjacent electrodes.
7. The device according to claim 6, characterized in that both ends of the device have inclined planes arranged over the side walls of the device.
8. The device according to claim 1, characterized in that the fit area has a square or rectangular section.
9. The device according to claim 1, characterized in that the fit area has beveled ends.
10. The device according to claim 1, characterized in that the fit area is discontinuous along the front extension of the device offering openings that expose a greater surface of the anode.
11. The device according to claim 1, characterized in that there are spacing elements located in one or both sides of the device, being an integral part of the device.
12. The device according to claim 11, characterized in that the spacing elements are located along the whole extension of the device.
13. The device according to claim 11, characterized in that the spacing elements are located at least in part of the extension of the device.
14. The device according to claim 11, characterized in that the spacing elements set a contact surface between anodes, keeping constant separation.
15. The device according to claim 1, characterized in that its cross-section is variable, facilitating the circulation of the electrolytic means by widening the anode's exposure angle.
16. The device according to claim 1, characterized in that it incorporates a triangular-shaped lower support with a flat base arranged to get in contact with the lower part of the electrolytic cell and inclined walls to favor the sliding of adjacent electrodes, wherein said support is an integral part of the device.
17. The device according to claim 1, characterized in that the fit area comprises a longitudinal extension of between 50% and 100% of said length.
18. The device according to claim 1, characterized in that the extension of the fit area comprises the whole length of the greater side of the anode where it is installed.
19. The device according to claim 1, characterized in that it is totally manufactured in plastic.
20. An anode-stiffening system comprising at least two stiffening device according to claim 1 installed on both greater sides of an anode, making the anode stiff, as well as providing an equidistant separation between adjacent electrodes.
21. The system according to claim 20, characterized in that it also comprises at least one central separating device longitudinally surrounding the anode, located at the central portion thereof.
22. The system according to claim 21, characterized in that the at least one central separating device consists of a continuous ring surrounding both faces of the anode.
23. The system according to claim 21, characterized in that the at least one central separating device consists of a ring sectioned in its lower portion, the sectioned ring surrounding both faces of the anode and leaving free the lower portion of the anode.
24. The system according to claim 21, characterized in that the at least one central separating device comprises fastening holes, so that to be fastened to an anode.
Type: Application
Filed: Aug 13, 2018
Publication Date: Mar 14, 2019
Inventor: Percy Danilo Yanez Castaneda (Antofagasta)
Application Number: 16/102,718