ACCS Technology from Lab to Feasibility: A Case Study

- Organization:
- The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
- Pages:
- 9
- File Size:
- 239 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1997
Abstract
"Gold ores containing oxide and some sulfide copper minerals incur significant cost penalties when leached with cyanide, because 4-5 moles of cyanide are consumed for each mole of leached copper. This equates to ~4 kg of NaCN per kg of leached copper. Total cost of excess NaCN consumption plus CN destruction can exceed $4.00 per tonne of ore. AuGMENT Technologies has patents pending on a process that can 1) economically recover 70-80% of the cyanide that is fed to a mill, 2) produce salable copper cathodes, and 3) reduce the need for a cyanide destruction facility. Standard equipment for resin processing and electrowinning are used to recover the cyanide and produce the copper cathodes. Steps have been taken to determine: 1) how to develop the resin kinetics, 2) how much savings are incurred at a mill site, 3) how the novel 'electro-elution' circuit achieves efficient operation.IntroductionWhen gold ores containing nuisance copper are leached with cyanide, a significant cost penalty is incurred because 4-5 moles of cyanide are consumed for each mole of copper that leaches. This is equivalent to the use of -4 kg of NaCN per kg of copper that leaches. The total cost of excess NaCN consumption plus cyanide destruction can exceed $4.00 per tonne of ore.AuGMENT Technologies has a patent pending on a process that can 1) economically recover 70-80% of the cyanide that is fed to a mill, 2) produce salable copper cathodes, and 3) reduce the need for a cyanide destruction facility. This ACCS (Au-.C.u-.C.N Solution) Process Technology involves the novel application of copper cyanide chemistry. Standard resin processing and electrowinning equipment are used to recover the cyanide and produce the copper cathodes."
Citation
APA:
(1997) ACCS Technology from Lab to Feasibility: A Case StudyMLA: ACCS Technology from Lab to Feasibility: A Case Study. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 1997.