Bell Bay aluminium smelter explained

The Bell Bay aluminium smelter is located on the Tamar River at Bell Bay, Tasmania, Australia. The smelter has a production capacity of 178,000 tonnes of aluminium per year.[1] It is owned and operated by Pacific Aluminium, a wholly owned subsidiary of Rio Tinto Alcan.

History

The Bell Bay smelter commenced production in 1955 as a joint venture between the Commonwealth and Tasmanian governments. The smelter was the first built in the Southern Hemisphere primarily to overcome difficulties importing aluminium during wartime. Bell Bay was chosen as the location because of the available hydroelectric power and deep water facilities. Rio Tinto Aluminium purchased the smelter in 1960, when production was about 12,000 tonnes per year.[2] The original potline (Line 1) used British Aluminium Söderberg technology. It was converted to useprebake anodes in 1965 and shut down in 1981.

Technology

The smelter currently comprises three potlines of Kaiser P-57 reduction cells[3]

Line 2 and Line 3 were built in the early 1960s. Line 4 was builtin two stages in the early 1980s.

See also

External links

-41.1239°N 146.8689°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Rio Tinto 2006 Data Book. 2007-08-19. https://web.archive.org/web/20070927001135/http://www.riotinto.com/documents/investors_databook/RTdatabook.pdf. 27 September 2007. dead.
  2. Book: Peterson , Warren S. . Hall-Heroult Centennial . The Metallurgical Society . 1986 . 0-87339-540-9., p22
  3. Web site: Alton Tabereaux - 'Prebake Cell Technology: A Global Review', JOM, 52 (2), pp 22-28.. 2007-08-19. https://web.archive.org/web/20070814083829/http://www.tms.org/pubs/journals/JOM/0002/Tabereaux-0002.html. 14 August 2007 . live.