1. What Is a Pb-Sb Anode?
A Pb-Sb anode is an insoluble lead-based anode containing 6–10% antimony (Sb), with the remainder being high-purity lead (≥99.994%). The addition of antimony significantly increases the mechanical strength and hardness of pure lead, transforming it into a rigid, wear-resistant material suitable for aggressive electrowinning environments. Some manufacturers also add small amounts of tin to form Pb-Sn-Sb ternary alloys for enhanced corrosion resistance.
2. Key Properties
| Property | Pb-Sb Anode | Pure Lead |
|---|---|---|
| Hardness (Brinell) | 12–18 HB | 4–6 HB |
| Tensile strength | 45–60 MPa | 12–15 MPa |
| Creep resistance | High | Low |
| Dimensional stability | Excellent | Poor |
Why antimony works: Antimony forms intermetallic compounds within the lead matrix, refining grain structure and preventing grain boundary sliding under mechanical and thermal stress.
3. Performance Advantages
3.1 High Hardness and Structural Integrity
The antimony addition provides a rigid mechanical backbone. Pb-Sb anodes resist warping, sagging, and deformation during long-term immersion and thermal cycling. This dimensional stability maintains a consistent anode-cathode gap, preventing hot spots, uneven current distribution, and short circuits – all of which directly affect current efficiency and power consumption.
3.2 Protective Oxide Layer Formation
When immersed in sulfuric acid electrolyte (150–200 g/L H₂SO₄), the lead surface oxidizes to form a dense, conductive PbO₂ layer. This self-passivating film acts as a ceramic armor, protecting the underlying alloy from further corrosion. The oxide layer regenerates continuously during normal operation.
Typical service life: 4–5 years under normal copper electrowinning conditions (current density 250–300 A/m², electrolyte temperature 40–65°C).
3.3 Electrical Conductivity
Pb-Sb alloys maintain good electrical conductivity (approximately 7–8% IACS). Uniform alloy distribution ensures even current distribution across the entire anode surface, contributing to consistent cathode copper quality.
4. Technical Specifications (PRS Standard)
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Antimony content | 6–10% (customizable) |
| Lead purity | ≥99.994% |
| Plate thickness | 6–15 mm (typically 8–10 mm) |
| Current density range | 250–300 A/m² |
| Electrolyte H₂SO₄ | 150–200 g/L |
| Operating temperature | 40–65°C |
| Service life | 5–8 years |
5. Applications
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Copper electrowinning (primary): Insoluble anodes for copper recovery from leach solutions. Pb-Sb anodes provide reliable oxygen evolution at low cost.
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Copper electrorefining: Used as anodes in refining circuits to produce high-purity cathode copper.
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Large-scale nonferrous smelting: Cost-effective solution for facilities operating hundreds or thousands of cells.
Limitations: Not recommended for electrolytes with high chloride concentration (>200 mg/L Cl⁻), where the protective oxide layer may degrade more rapidly. For such conditions, Pb-Ag or Pb-Sn alloys are preferable.
6. Comparison with Other Lead Alloy Anodes
| Feature | Pb-Sb | Pb-Ca-Sn | Pb-Ag |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hardness | High | Medium-High | Medium |
| Corrosion resistance | Good | Very Good | Excellent (zinc sulfate media) |
| Relative cost | Low | Medium | High (due to silver) |
| Typical service life (Cu EW) | 5–8 years | 5–7 years | 2–3 years (zinc) |
| Best application | Copper EW/ER | Copper EW (low slime) | Zinc EW |
Cost advantage: Pb-Sb anodes are approximately 30–40% cheaper than Pb-Ag anodes, offering 80–90% of the performance at 60–70% of the cost. For many mid-sized copper plants, this represents the optimal value-for-money choice.
7. Factors Affecting Performance
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Current density: Operating above 300 A/m² accelerates corrosion and reduces service life.
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Electrolyte purity: Cobalt ions (10–20 mg/L) can inhibit corrosion; chloride ions are detrimental.
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Manufacturing quality: Hot rolling and cold rolling produce denser, more uniform anodes than simple casting. A well-rolled Pb-Sb anode significantly outlasts a cast anode.
8. Manufacturing Process (PRS)
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High-purity lead and antimony are melted at 320–350°C.
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The molten alloy is cast into molds with integrated copper hanger bars (metallurgically bonded).
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Hot rolling and cold rolling for precise thickness and density.
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Surface treatment to enhance oxide layer adhesion.
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Quality inspection (alloy composition, flatness, defect-free casting).
9. Summary
Pb-Sb anodes remain a practical, cost-effective choice for copper electrowinning and electrorefining where budget and reliability are prioritized over marginal performance gains. Their combination of high hardness, self-passivating oxide layer, and 4–5 year service life delivers predictable operating costs for mid-to-large-scale copper facilities.