Pretreatment of a Gold Refractory Concentrate: Pressure Oxidation vs Fine Grinding

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Gerardo Fuentes Adriana Garcés Sergio Romo
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
12
File Size:
2310 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2014

Abstract

Refractory ores with gold entrapped in a sulfide matrix, must be processed in a first stage with chemical or physical treatment in order to liberate the gold for a subsequent step with cyanide. The goal of this research was to compare the refractory behavior of a gold concentrate treated using two pretreatment methods: pressure oxidation and fine grinding. Gold concentrate from Viacha Mining in Bolivia, assaying 50.11 gpt, with a P80 of 131 ?m was used. The concentrate contains arsenopyrite and pyrite as main sulphides in the matrix. A preliminary test with cyanide resulted only 13.5% of gold extraction with 4 hours of stirred leaching. Using an autoclave oxidation with sulphuric acid and 12 bar oxygen pressure at 220°C pretreatment, the cyanide gold extraction increased to 69.0% in 4 hours. When material was ground in a pulverizer, producing a P80 of 20 ?m and the product directly cyanided, stirred leaching gave a gold extraction of 65% in 4 hours. For both techniques, the effect of temperature, sulfur produced in autoclave oxidation, optimization of the cyanide and the nature of residues were also studied.
Citation

APA: Gerardo Fuentes Adriana Garcés Sergio Romo  (2014)  Pretreatment of a Gold Refractory Concentrate: Pressure Oxidation vs Fine Grinding

MLA: Gerardo Fuentes Adriana Garcés Sergio Romo Pretreatment of a Gold Refractory Concentrate: Pressure Oxidation vs Fine Grinding. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2014.

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