The Co-Processing of Nickel Sulphide and Laterite Materials Using Low Oxygen Pressures

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
R. McDonald D. Robinson M. Jackson T. Osken
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
15
File Size:
477 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2012

Abstract

"The addition of sulphidic materials in the leaching of nickel laterites has several potential benefits that include improvements in the rheological behaviour of the blends, reductions in the sulphuric acid and steam requirements, sweetening of the nickel grade of the combined feed material, and the option of using a range of sulphidic materials. The current study examines the oxidative processing of 30% w/w blends of nickel concentrate and nickel laterite ore at 250oC. In particular, the viability of using low oxygen overpressures was examined for significant amounts of nickel flotation concentrate, up to 12% w/w. Further to this the impact of process water quality, in particular the presence of chloride, upon the kinetics of extraction and the mineralogy of the residue were also investigated. This paper will present the results of preliminary work in this area.INTRODUCTIONThe use of sulphidic ore as a source of sulphuric acid during oxidative hydrometallurgical processing is not a novel idea and can be traced back over forty years (Seidel & Fitzhugh, 1968). A series of patents pertaining to application of this approach for laterite ores can be subsequently found (O’Neill, 1973; Opratko et al., 1974; Rodriguez, 2008a, 2008b; O’Callaghan, 2010; Liu et al., 2011) and a few of articles containing published data (Ferron & Fleming, 2004; Quinn et al., 2009). The use of pyrrhotite tailings as a source of sulphuric acid has also been employed for the leaching of converter slags (Perederiy et al., 2011).It is known that hydrometallurgical operations such as the HPAL plant at Murrin Murrin have added small amounts of sulphides as either transitional (mixed sulphide/oxide) ore or non-smeltable concentrate. This can improve the rheology (Rodriguez, 2009) and provide heat credits. However these plants are generally limited in their ability to add such materials due to their reducing nature and given under highly acidic conditions that the breakdown potential of the titanium used for the autoclave lining is significantly reduced. A suitable oxidant must therefore be present to ensure the potential remains sufficiently high."
Citation

APA: R. McDonald D. Robinson M. Jackson T. Osken  (2012)  The Co-Processing of Nickel Sulphide and Laterite Materials Using Low Oxygen Pressures

MLA: R. McDonald D. Robinson M. Jackson T. Osken The Co-Processing of Nickel Sulphide and Laterite Materials Using Low Oxygen Pressures. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2012.

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