Supercritical Water Treatment Of Refractory Gold Ores: A Status Report

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
W. K. Tolley D. C. Seidel
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
10
File Size:
520 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1990

Abstract

Supercritical water alters the structure of common sulfide minerals by partially removing sulfur from the mineral structure. This discovery has been applied to the treatment of pyritic gold ores to improve precious metal recovery without generating or utilizing environmentally sensitive products such as S02, chlorine, or cyanide. Pretreating pyrite concentrates in supercritical water under mildly oxidizing conditions provided by certain metal oxides or oxygen improved gold leaching using thiourea. The pretreatment differs from chlorination or roast pretreatments in that elemental sulfur rather than sulfuric acid is the major product. A pyritic ore containing 58 g/mt Au was pretreated with oxygenated supercritical water at 24 MPa and 400°C, then leached with 20 g/L thiourea. With pretreatment, gold recovery was 90%; by contrast, gold recovery was below 10% without pretreatment.
Citation

APA: W. K. Tolley D. C. Seidel  (1990)  Supercritical Water Treatment Of Refractory Gold Ores: A Status Report

MLA: W. K. Tolley D. C. Seidel Supercritical Water Treatment Of Refractory Gold Ores: A Status Report. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1990.

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