Bioleaching of Gold Refractory Arsenopyrite Rich Sulphide Concentrate: Laboratory and Pilot Case Studies

The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
D. Morin
Organization:
The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Pages:
13
File Size:
512 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1991

Abstract

A general study of gold refractory arsenopyrite-pyrite concentrate bioleaching has been carried out including two continuous bioleach testworks at different sizes, namely one at a laboratory scale with a 100 I unit at a 2 kg/d dry solid flowrate and the other at a pilot scale at a 100 kg/d dry solid flowrate. Both tests show a 80% bioleaching of arsenopyrite in about four days of treatment and with the same kinetic. Pyrrhotite is attacked at the earlier stage of the bioleaching but pyrite remains unaffected. The weak potential of oxidation associated with the decomposition of arsenopyrite and the abundance of arsenite leads to a high grade of elemental sulfur in the bioresidue which consumes the major part of the cyanide during the gold recovery. Furthermore. the arsenite and ferrous produced in solution have to be oxidized to obtain a stable precipitate in the waste products and as outlined in previous works of other authors on this subject the addition of iron to obtain a Fe/As molar ratio at least above 3 is necessary. The agitation equipment used in the pilot unit allowed an optimization study calculation for scaling-up the design and power requirements of an industrial installation. For the pretreatment of a gold refractory As high-graded concentrate the reagent cost has the greatest part in the operating cost of the biooxidation step due to the necessary retreatment of the biosolution. In that conditions the power cost is quite marginal. actually it is significant for the treatment of pure pyrite.
Citation

APA: D. Morin  (1991)  Bioleaching of Gold Refractory Arsenopyrite Rich Sulphide Concentrate: Laboratory and Pilot Case Studies

MLA: D. Morin Bioleaching of Gold Refractory Arsenopyrite Rich Sulphide Concentrate: Laboratory and Pilot Case Studies. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 1991.

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