Gold Extraction and Recovery Processes
Gold Extraction and Recovery Processes
Gold Extraction and Recovery Processes
WongWaiLeongEugeneandArunS.Mujumdar
Minerals, Metals and Materials Technology Centre (M3TC) Faculty of Engineering, National University of Singapore
Mar2009
MINERALS,METALSANDMATERIALSTECHNOLOGYCENTRE(M3TC) NATIONALUNIVERSITYOFSINGAPORE
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GOLDEXTRACTIONANDRECOVERYPROCESSES
Executive Summary
Various methods such as gravity concentration, flotation, panning, pyrometallurgy, cyanidation etc are available for the extraction of gold metal from its ores. Amongst these methods, cyanidation is the most common method used in the leaching of gold from the ore. This process involves the dissolution of gold containing ores in dilute cyanide solution in the presence of lime and oxygen. For refractory ores such as sulfide ores and carbonaceous ores which are not susceptible to direct cyanide leaching, various methods such as pressure oxidation, roasting, chlorination, biooxidation etc are available to treat these ores to expose the gold particles before cyanidation. Thioura leaching was developed as a potential substitute to cyanide leaching due to its lower toxicity and greater rate of gold and silver dissolution. Other alternative lixiviants to cyanide such as bromides (acid and alkaline), chlorides and thiosulfate are also being developed. The common processes for recovery of gold solution includes: (i) Carbon adsorption, Merrill-Crowe process, (iii) electrowinning and (iv) ion-exchange / solvent extraction. Traditionally, Merrill-Crowe process was used to remove gold from a cyanide solution by using zinc dust to precipitate gold from its solution. Carbon adsorption is increasing using in newer plants for gold recovery. Carbon in Pulp (CIP) technique involves contacting the leached pulp with granular carbon in a series of agitating tanks with a sufficient retention time. Selected summary of patented gold recovery processes and examples of commercial mining and recovery gold processes are also provided in this report.
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Introduction
Gold has been known and highly valued since prehistoric times. It may have been the first metal used by humans and was valued for ornamentation and rituals [1]. Approximately 60% of the gold mined today is held by government and central banks and gold is presently the most significant means of international payment [2].
Reserves That part of the reserve base which could be economically extracted or produced at the time of determination. The term reserves need not signify that extraction facilities are in place and operative. Reserves include only recoverable materials; thus, terms such as extractable reserves and recoverable reserves are redundant and are not a part of this classification system Reserve Base That part of an identified resource that meets specified minimum physical and chemical criteria related to current mining and production practices, including those for grade, quality, thickness, and depth. The reserve base is the inplace demonstrated (measured plus indicated) resource from which reserves are estimated. It may encompass those parts of the resources that have a reasonable potential for becoming economically available within planning horizons beyond those that assume proven technology and current economics. The reserve base includes those resources that are currently economic (reserves), marginally economic (marginal reserves), and some of those that are currently subeconomic (subeconomic resources). The term geologic reserve has been applied by others generally to the reserve-base category, but it also may include the inferred-reserve-base category; it is not a part of this classification system.
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Gold Minerals
In nature, gold most often occurs in its native state (that is, as a metal), though usually alloyed with silver. Native gold contains usually eight to ten percent silver, but often much more alloys with a silver content over 20% are called electrum [1]. The average concentration of gold in the world is about 0.005 g/t which is lower than other metals. The low concentration of gold in primary rocks means that upgrading by a factor of 3000-4000 is usually required during ore formation processes to achieve commercial concentrations. This may be possible using natural gravity concentration processes or leaching gold with natural fluids from the host rock. Thus, by highly oxidizing, acidic and complexing (chloride) solutions, followed by redeposition in a more concentrate form. Owing to its siderophile properties (weak affinity for oxygen and sulfur, high affinity for metals) gold tends to concentrate in residual hydrothermal fluids and subsequent metallic or sulphidic phases, rather than silicates, which form at an early stage of magma cooling. Rocks that are high in clays and low in carbonates are the best sources of gold, and reprecipitation occurs when the hydrothermal solutions encounter a reducing environment, such as a region of high carbonate, carbon or reducing sulphide contain [3]. The various types of common gold deposits are tabulated in Table 2 [2]. Table 2 Gold deposits
Deposit Structural character Gold-quartz Hydrothermal lodes veins Age Mostly precambrian Type locality To be expected in precambrian rocks, such as the Canadian, Australian, BrazilianGuayana and AfricanArabian shields Emperor deposit (Fiji) Main minerals Low-silver native Au Assoc. minerals Quartz Typical elements Si Metals mined Au % of world production 20-25
Epithermal deposits
Hydrothermal veins
Tertiary
Te, Bi, Pb, Au, Ag, As, Sb, some Hg, etc. base metals Au, Ti, REs, Nb
Very small
Young placers
Heavy Ti, REs, minerals such Nb as monazite, ilmenite, zircon, apatite, pyrochlore, etc Heavy minerals including uraninite U, PGE, etc
Fossil placers
Conglomerates Precambrian consisting of quartz pebbles in matrix of pyrite and mica Mesozoic tertiary
Witwatersrand Native Au To be expected in the precambrian shields Carlin, Cortez, Very fine Getchel, Gold native Au Acres (Nevada type ores); Bald Mountain
Au, U, PGE
More than 60
Au
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Greenstones Metamorphosed volcanic
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Precambrian Kalgoorlie, Hemlo, Timmins, Val DOr Kirkland Lake Native Au, calaverite Tellurides of Au, Hg, Pb, Cu, Bi, compounds of gold with Hg, Sb, and other elements, native tellurium Pyrite, Fe oxides, various silicates Hg, Pb, Bi, Sb Au Has been increasing
Mesozoic tertiary
Native Au
Fe, Si
Au
5-10
The major categories of commercially viable recovery processes include the following [4, 5]: 1. Amalgamation (with mercury) 2. Gravity Concentration (using jogs, tables, spirals, Reichert cone, moving belt separator, etc.) 3. Flotation (as free particles or contained in base metal sulfide concentrates)
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4. Pyrometallurgy (in the smelting and refining of base metal ores and concentrates) 5. Hydrometallurgy (direct cyanidation, cyanidation with carbon adsorption, heap-leach and chlorination-leach) 6. Refractory ore processing 7. Alternative lixiviants Amalgamation This is an ancient process which involves the alloying of the gold particles with metallic mercury to form amalgam and then the separation of the gold from the mercury by heating in retorts until the mercury is distilled off. The method is used for the treatment of coarser gold (30 microns in diameter or greater) [2]. This process is strongly out of favor with the major mining companies, due to the extremely toxic nature of mercury and the processes inferior performance when compared to the available alternatives. The process is still used extensively by artesian mines in third world countries and at small mines, due to its simplicity [4]. Gravity Concentration Gravity concentration processes rely on the principal that gold contained within an ore body is higher in specific gravity than the host rocks that contain the gold [4]. Elemental gold has a specific gravity of 19.3, and typical ore has a specific gravity of about 2.6. All gravity concentration devices create movement between the gold and host rock particles in a manner to separate the heavy pieces from the lighter pieces of material. Panning is probably the oldest technique used for the recovery of gold. Panning is a type of gravity concentration used by prospectors for the recovery of gold from river beds. It concentrates the heavy gold particles at the bottom of the pan while the light gangue is washed off on top [2]. Flotation The flotation process consists of producing a mineral concentrate through the use of chemical conditioning agents followed by intense agitation and air sparging of the agitated ore slurry to produce a mineral rich foam concentrate [4]. The process is said to have been invented by a miner who watched the process happening while washing dirty work clothing in his home washing machine. Specific chemicals are added to either float (foam off) specific minerals or to depress the flotation of other minerals. Several stages of processing are generally involved with rough bulk flotation products being subjected to additional flotation steps to increase product purity. The flotation process in general does not float free gold particles but is particularly effective when gold is associated with sulfide minerals such as pyrites. In a typical pyrytic gold ore, the gold is encapsulated within an iron sulfide crystal structure. Highly oxidized ores generally do not respond well to flotation. Advantages of the flotation process are that gold values are generally liberated at a fairly coarse particle size (28 mesh) which means that ore grinding costs are minimized. The reagents used for flotation are generally not toxic, which means that tailings disposal costs are low. Flotation will frequently be used when gold is recovered in conjunction with other metals such as copper, lead, or zinc. Flotation concentrates are usually sent to an off-site smelting facility for recovery of gold and base metals. Cyanide leaching is frequently used in conjunction with flotation. Cyanidation of flotation concentrates or flotation tailings is done depending upon the specific mineralogy and flowsheet economics.
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Cyanide Process
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It is the most common used process for gold extraction. This process involves the dissolution of gold (and of any silver present in soluble form) from the ground ore in a dilute cyanide solution (usually NaCN or KCN) in the presence of lime and oxygen according to the reactions [2,5]: 2Au + 4KCN + O2 + 2H2O = 2KAu(CN)2 + 2KOH + H2O2 2Au + 4KCN + H2O2 = 2KAu(CN)2 + 2KOH Elsners equation 4Au + 8CN- + O2 + 2H2O 4Au(CN)2- + 4OH-
With optimum cyanide concentration (about 0.05% NaCN), clean gold particles dissolve at a rate of 3.25 mg per sq cm per hour while for silver the rate is about one-half that of gold. Therefore , coarse gold particles (larger than 100 mesh) are usually removed by gravity concentration methods before cyanidation. In general, cyanidation process consists of percolation or agitation leaching of gold and silver ores with dilute cyanide solution, generally less than 0.3 percent sodium cyanide. In plant practice the addition of lime to a cyanide pulp is universal to prevent hydrolysis and to neutralize any acidic constituents present in the ore. Additional advantages of lime addition include decomposition of bicarbonates in mill water, improvement in settling rate in counter current decantation thickeners and improvement in extraction rates for certain types of ores such as tellurides and ruby silver. Heap Leaching Heap leaching was introduced in the 1970s as a means to drastically reduce gold recovery costs. This process has literally made many mines by taking low grade geological resources and transforming them to the proven ore category. Ore grades as low as 0.01 oz Au per ton have been economically processed by heap leaching [4]. Heap leaching involves placing crushed or run of mine ore in a pile built upon an impervious liner. Cyanide solution is distributed across the top of the pile and the solution percolates down through the pile and leaches out the gold. The gold laden pregnant solution drains out from the bottom of the pile and is collected for gold recovery by either carbon adsorption or zinc precipitation. The barren solution is then recycled to the pile. Heap leaching generally requires 60 to 90 days for processing ore that could be leached in 24 hours in a conventional agitated leach process. Gold recovery is typically 60-80% as compared with 85-95% in an agitated leach plant. Even with this inferior performance, the process has found wide favor, due to the vastly reduced processing costs compared with agitated leaching. The cost advantages are as follows: 1. Comminution: Where as heap leaching is typically done on 3/4 inch rock, agitated leaching requires reduction to 200 mesh. This additional step is typically done with large grinding mills that consume roughly one horsepower per ton per day of capacity. 2. Solids liquid separation steps are not required for heap leaching. 3. Tailings disposal costs are quite high for a modern agitated leach plant. Large expensive liquid containment dams are required. By comparison, heap leach pads can generally be left in place after reclamation. Disadvantages, in addition to lower recovery of heap leaching compared with agitated leaching, include: 1. The stacked ore must be porous enough to allow solution to trickle through it. There have been many recovery failures due to the inability to obtain solution flow. This is widely
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experienced when ores have a high clay content. This problem is often alleviated by agglomeration prior to heap stacking. 2. In areas of high rainfall, solution balance problems can arise, resulting in the need to treat and discharge process water. 3. In extremely cold areas, heap freezing can result in periods of low recovery. Operational procedure modifications such as subsurface solution application have reduced, but not eliminated, this concern. 4. Ice and snow melting can result in excessive accumulation of leach solutions. This concern can often be mitigated by use of diversion structures. Quite frequently, mines will use agitated leaching for high grade ore and heap leaching for marginal grade ores that otherwise would be considered waste rock. A common recovery plant is often employed for both operations. Table 3 Heap and dump leaching practices in USA
Mine/Operator Maggie Creek, Newmont Gold Quarry Zortman/LandPegasus Relief CanyonLacana Pinson-Pinson Mining Prebble-Pinson Mining Borealis-Tenneco Alligator RidgeAmelsco Ortiz-Goldfields Round Mt.-Smoky Valley NorthumberlandCyprus Reserves (000s) 3,600 90,000 28,000 9,200 2,200 1,800 2,000 3,000 7,100 200,000 16,000 Grade (oz/t Au) 0.049 0.035 0.035 0.032 0.025 0.062 0.090 0.070 0.053 0.037 0.050 Capacity (stpd) 2,000 20,000 16,000 4,000 1,500 1,000 2,500 3,000 3,500 18,000 4,000 Type Operation Uncrushed-aggl.-dump-CA-EW Uncrushed-dump-CA-EW Uncrushed-dump-MC Uncrushed-heap-CA-EW Uncrushed-heap-CA-EW Uncrushed-heap-CA-EW -1-Aggl.a-heap-MC -3/4-Aggl. -heap-CA-EW -3/8-Aggl.-heap-CA-EW -3/8-heap-CA-EW -5/16-Aggl.-heap-CA-EW
a
Recovery (%) 45 45 50 50 60 40 70 80 80 75 70
MC: Merrill-Crowe CA: Carbon Adsorption EW: Electrowinning a Agglomeration with lime or cement and cyanide
Refractory Ore Processing The common definition of "refractory" gold ores, are those ores that do not allow the recovery of gold by standard gravity concentration or direct cyanide leaching. Typical refractory ores include: (i) Gold is very finely disseminated or is present in solid solution in sulfide matrix, mostly pyrite, pyrrhotite and arsenopyrite. (ii) Gold associated with tellurides. (iii) Gold/silver values are contained in base metal sulfides of lead, copper and zinc. (iv) Gold is present in carbonaceous ores. (v) Silver is very finely disseminated in the gangue matrix, mostly quartz or complexed with manganese oxides.
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With many sulfide ores, the ore cannot practically be ground down fine enough to expose the gold particles. For cyanide to leach gold, the cyanide solution must come into direct contact with gold molecules. The objective of pretreatment (by roasting) for these ores is to remove enough of the sulfide so that at least a small portion of all gold particles are directly exposed, making them amenable to cyanidation. Processes available for treatment all involve oxidation of sulfur to form water soluble sulfates or sulfur dioxide. The main sulfur oxidation processes include: 1. Pressure oxidation: Utilizes oxygen and heat under pressure in a liquid medium, to effect oxidation of sulfur by way of a controlled chemical reaction. High pressure autoclaves are used for the reactors. Reactor operation is under alkaline or acidic conditions, depending upon the specific process. The oxygen overpressure required is primarily determined by the mass transfer requirements of the process and higher overpressures tend to shorten the reaction rate and thus the residence time [5]. 2. Bio-oxidation: Bio-oxidation uses sulfur consuming bacteria in a water solution to remove sulfur. Biological oxidation of sulfide minerals is carried out by the bacterium Thiobacillus Ferrooxidans under optimum conditions (pH = 2 and 30C) [5]. Advantages of this process include use of air instead of oxygen and normal atmospheric operating conditions. Disadvantages include long retention time (may range from 15 hours to 150 hours) due to slow bacterial oxidation rate, cooling required due to exothermic nature of reaction and addition of lime to adjust pH in the range 1 to 2. 3. Roasting: Roasting uses heat and air to burn away the sulfur from dry ore. Roasting was the standard method for sulfur oxidation years ago when it was considered environmentally acceptable to emit large quantities of sulfur dioxide gas into the atmosphere. Todays roasting plants employ elaborate gas scrubbing systems that frequently produce sulfuric acid as a byproduct. 4. Chemical oxidation using nitric acid at ambient pressure and temperature has also been used on a limited basis. Carbonaceous ores that allow cyanide to dissolve gold but quickly adsorb gold back onto the active carbon in the ore. Treatment processes include chlorination for carbon deactivation, roasting to burn away carbon and carbon-in-leach which introduces competing high activity carbon to preferentially adsorb gold that can be conveniently separated from the leach slurry. Gold ores containing copper and zinc require uneconomically high quantities of cyanide to process due to the solubility of copper and zinc in cyanide. In practice, to avoid excessive cyanide consumption by copper and zinc, the roasted alcine is usually acid leached to dissolve copper and zinc prior to cyanidation [5]. Ores containing gold tellurides may also be effectively treated effectively by a combination of roasting and cyanidation [5]. It should be noted that most of the refractory ore treatment processes are expensive and frequently economical only with higher grade ores and high processing rates. Thiourea leaching This method was developed as a potential substitute for cyanidation (of gold as well as silver). Thioureas lower toxicity and greater rate of gold and silver dissolution compared to cyanide give it an advantage in reaching commercial application before other non-commercial lixiviants [2]. Alternative lixiviants include bromides (acid and alkaline), chlorides and thiosulfate. The lower sensitivity to base metals (As, Pb, Cu, Sb, Zn) or impurities render possible the use of this process on many refractory gold ores. Thiourea leaching has been tried on different materials and ores with success. Pre-roasted materials were leached with gold extractions up to 99 per cent with leaching time as short as 30 minutes. Recovery of gold from pyrite and chalcopyrite concentrate has given 96 per cent extraction. Extraction of 90 per cent is reported on carbonaceous material. Commecial application of thiourea in the extraction of gold is performed in Australia on antimony concentrate, on carbonaceous concentrate in China and in roasted zinc ores in France.
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The major concern in thiourea leaching is the degradation of the reagents. Uncontrolled oxidation of thiourea not only leads to loss of reagent but also the formation of elemental sulfur which covers the gold particles and prevents its leaching [5]. The dissolved precious metals from pregnant solution can be recovered by suitable adsorptions such as activated carbon, strong acid cation exchangers and thio/resins or using electrowinnig, cementation and gaseous reduction [5]. Most of the work done to recover gold with thiourea is on the leaching part of the process. Few results are available on the recovery of gold and silver from the pregnant solution [2].
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The rich eluate solution that emerges from the elution process is passed through electrowinning cells where gold and other metals are precipitated onto the cathodes. After precipitation, the product is treated with dilute sulfuric acid to dissolve residual zinc and most of the copper (if any is present) [2]. The residual is washed, dried and melted with fluxes. The remaining gold and silver alloy, called dore, is cast into molds for assay. Refining is accomplished by electrolysis during which silver and any platinum group elements are also separated and recovered. Another method of separating gold from silver dore is by parting, where hot concentrated sulfuric or nitric acids are used to differentially dissolve the silver, while the gold is recovered from the residue. (ii) Merrill-Crowe process The Merrill-Crowe Process is a separation technique for removing gold from a cyanide solution. The solution is separated from the ore by methods such as filtration and counter current decantation (CCD) and is then clarified in special filters, usually coated with diatomaceous earth to produce a clarified solution [6]. Oxygen is then removed by passing through a vacuum deaeration column. Zinc dust is then added to the clarified, deaerated solution which precipitates the gold because zinc has a higher affinity for the cyanide ion than gold. Gold (along with silver) is then precipitated with zinc dust according to the reaction: 2KAU(CN)2 + Zn = K2Zn(CN)4 + 2Au The gold precipitate is then filtered out of the solution, mixed with fluxes and smelted to form crude and impure bars which are sent to a refinery to remove the copper and silver, the process used depending on the impurities in the gold. The major advantage of carbon-in-pulp recovery over Merrill Crowe recovery is the elimination of the leached ore solids and liquid separation unit operation. The separation step typically involves a series of expensive gravity separation thickeners or continuous filters arranged for countercurrent washing or filtration of the solids. For ores exhibiting slow settling or filtration rates, such as ores with high clay content, the countercurrent decantation (CCD) step can become cost prohibitive. Ores with high silver content will generally suggest that Merrill-Crowe recovery be used. This is because of the very large carbon stripping and electrowinning systems required for processing large quantities of silver. The typical rule of thumb states that economic silver to gold ratios of greater than 4 to 1, will favor installation of a Merrill-Crowe system, but this decision can be altered if the ore exhibits very slow settling rates.
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(iii) Electrowinning
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Electrowinning, also called electroextraction, is the electrodeposition of metals from their ores that have been put in solution or liquefied [6]. Electrorefining uses a similar process to remove impurities from a metal. Both processes use electroplating on a large scale and are important techniques for the economical and straightforward purification of non-ferrous metals. The resulting metals are said to be electrowon. In electrowinning, a current is passed from an inert anode through a liquid leach solution containing the metal so that the metal is extracted as it is deposited in an electroplating process onto the cathode. In electrorefining, the anodes consist of unrefined impure metal, and as the current passes through the acidic electrolyte the anodes are corroded into the solution so that the electroplating process deposits refined pure metal onto the cathodes. (iv) Ion-Exchange/Solvent-Extraction This is one of the emerging technologies which involve the recovery of precious metals from pregnant solutions by ion-exchange resins using the resin-in-column (RIC) technique [5]. The process is similar to CIC. One major exception involves the operation of the elution (stripping) stage which does not require elevated temperatures and pressures for removal of precious metals from loaded resins. Either strong or weak base resins may be used. Stripping of the loaded gold values from the resin has proven to be difficult and requires further research. Solvent extraction of gold from alkaline cyanide solution was limited due to the lack of a selective extractant. Recent developments in solvent extraction using modified amines and alkyl phosphorus esters have been reported to provide for selective gold extraction from alkaline cyanide solution [5].
4,597,791
4,681,628
21/7/86
3/4/08
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chloride and ferric ion.
7,498,006
Extraction of gold from arsenic gold ore concentrate Increase temperature of smelting chamber to 100300C, hold temperature to remove vapor and small quantity of dust Under residual pressure 50MPa, increase temperature to 300-500C to remove volatile arsenic sulfides Hold temperature of crystalline chamber at 300500C, increase temperature of smelting chamber to 500-600C to remove elemental sulfur Increase temperature of smelting chamber to 600760C, lower temperature of crystalline chamber to 270-370C to allow arsenic vapor to crystallize and obtain elemental arsenic Lower temperature to obtain gold rich slag after dearsenization Gold slag processed using conventional methods Flowsheet provided in Appendix B
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Figure 3 Flowsheet for gold and silver recovery by Merrill-Crowe Process [8].
CFD modeling and comparison with experimental residence time distributions in single and two phase porous flows This paper focus on the CFD modeling and validation of flow of a non-reactive tracer through a porous medium in a column geometry to simulate the leaching of metals using heap-leaching methods [9]. The model is able to take into account the particle porosity and size distribution. A two-dimensional CFD model for heap bioleaching of chalcocite CFD model for heap bioleaching of chalcocite was developed to investigate the effect of poor oxygenation (in 2D) in heap bioleaching of copper sulfide [10]. Based on the results, it was found that under limited oxygen, the heap is leached from the bottom up progressively, as the oxygen became available to the upper regions, after the bottom regions have been leached as shown in Figures 4 to 6.
Figure 4 (a) Copper extracted (b) bacterial concentration in solution (normalized by initial concentration Co = 1014 bacteria m-3 solution) (c) oxygen in liquid (normalized by initial oxygen concentration), and (d) ferrous ions (gL-1), at 23 days.
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Figure 5 (a) Copper extracted (b) bacterial concentration in solution (normalized by initial concentration Co = 1014 bacteria m-3 solution) (c) oxygen in liquid (normalized by initial oxygen concentration), and (d) ferrous ions (gL-1), at 46 days.
Figure 6 (a) Copper extracted (b) bacterial concentration in solution (normalized by initial concentration Co = 1014 bacteria m-3 solution) (c) oxygen in liquid (normalized by initial oxygen concentration), and (d) ferrous ions (gL-1), at 116 days.
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compact. Water is decanted off and used in the process plant or treated before it is discharged. Case Study 2: Jerritt Canyon, Yukon-Nevada Gold Corp The mineral processing operation at Jerritt Canyon is very complex and is one of only three processing plants in Nevada that uses roasting in its treatment of refractory ores. Initially, Jerritt Canyon was designed to process oxide and mildly refractory gold ores by conventional cyanidation using chlorine gas for pre-oxidation of the refractory ores. In 1989, the roasting circuit was added to the process for the treatment of highly refractory ores which are now being mined and processed at Jerritt Canyon. The unit operations at the Jerritt Canyon processing plant are comprised of the following circuits: Primary crushing; Secondary crushing; Fine ore drying; Tertiary crushing; Dry grinding; Roasting; Carbon-in-leach (CIL) with cyanidation and carbon adsorption; Carbon stripping; Carbon reactivation; Merrill-Crowe process using zinc cementation of gold and silver; Precipitate refining; Oxygen plant; and Tailing impoundment.
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Appendix A
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Flowsheet for US Patent 4,578,163 Gold Recovery Process.
Appendix B
Flowsheet for US Patent 7,498,006B2 Process for extracting gold in arsenic-containing concentrate of gold.
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References
1 2
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gold Claudia Gasparrini, Gold and other precious metals: From ore to market, Springer-Verlag, 1993. 3 http://www.e-goldprospecting.com/html/gold_minerals.html 4 http://www.denvermineral.com/basicp~1.html 5 Gold: Advances in Precious Metal Recovery, Nathaniel Arbiter and Kenneth N. Han (Editors), Gordon and Breach Science Publishers, 1990. 6 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gold_cyanidation 7 A.E. Sanchez-Chacon and G.T. Lapidus, Model for heap leaching of gold ores by cyanidation. Hydrometallurgy, 44 (1997): 1-20. 8 G. Chi, M.C. Fuerstenau, J.O. Marsden, Study of Merrill-Crowe processing: Part I and Part II, Int. J. Miner. Process. 49 (1997), 171-192. 9 J. Bujalski, R. Tiller-Jeffery, H. Watling and M.P. Schwarz, CFD modeling and comparison with experimental residence time distributions in single and two-phase porous flow, 3rd International Conference on CFD in the Minerals and Process Industries, CSIRO Melbourne Australia, 10-12 December 2003, 463-468. 10 M.J. Leahy, M.R. Davidson and M.P. Schwarz, A two-dimensional CFD model for heap bioleaching of chalcocite, ANZIAM J. 46 (2005) 439-457. 11 http://www.newmont.com/en/operations/australianz/waihigold/mining/recovery/index.asp
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