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During roasting care is required to regulate the air supply, the object being to avoid too fierce a roast, which tends to sinter and partially fuse the material on the outer portions of the lumps, while inside there is raw slime. By extending the roast over a longer period this is avoided, and a more complete desulphurization is effected. Experiments conducted by Mr. Bradford, the chief assayer, demonstrated that, at a temperature of 400 deg. C., the sulphide slime is converted into basic sulphate, while at a temperature of 800 deg. C. the material becomes sintered owing to the decomposition of the basic sulphate and the formation of fusible silicate of lead.
In practice, the sulphur contents of the material, which originally are about 14 per cent., become reduced to from 6.5 to 8.5 per cent., half in the form of basic sulphate and half as sulphides; much of the material sinters and becomes matted together in a fairly solid mass. The heaps are built without chimneys of any kind; a strip about 5 ft. wide along the crest of the pile is left uncovered by plastered slime, and this, together with the open way in which the lumps are built in, allows a natural draft to be set up, which can be regulated by partly closing the open ends of the flues at the base of the pile. Masonry kilns were used in the earlier stages with good results, which, however, were not so much better than those obtained by the heap method as to justify the expense of building, taking into consideration, too, the extra cost of handling the roasted material in the necessarily more confined space.