What to do with CIL Carbon Fines? Iamgold’s Innovative Solution

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
V. Aubé S. Bellec M. Barakate M. R. Eddahabi Y. Chaik M. Deshaies J. Girard
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
10
File Size:
913 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2017

Abstract

"The activated carbon used in the carbon-in-leach (CIL) process to absorb gold is subject to breakage. This carbon breakage can be minimized, but it will always be necessary to deal with fine carbon particles, known as carbon fines. These fines contain a significant amount of gold and mining operations generally struggle with the treatment of this product. Since IAMGOLD’s Essakane mine is located in Burkina Faso, shipping carbon fines out of the country was not considered a viable solution due to the logistical burden and legal procedures in place. A benchmarking study demonstrated the complexity of treating carbon fines on site. IAMGOLD partnered with the host government to find an innovative approach to economically recover the gold locked in these fines. This paper describes the new circuits commissioned in July 2016 built to improve carbon fines collection, incinerate the carbon fines and leach the gold in the ashes produced by incineration. These new circuits successfully demonstrate that it is possible to extract more than 94% of the gold content in the carbon fines. This is profitable for the company as it improves the overall mill recovery rate by 1.0% to 1.5% and significantly decreases gold inventory build-up on site.INTRODUCTION The activated carbon used in the carbon-in-leach (CIL) to absorb gold is subject to breakage. This breakage can occur in the CIL tanks, the stripping circuit, the regeneration process or anywhere throughout the pumping and handling processes of carbon through the circuit. Fine carbon particles are invariably created and, because of their small size, present a large specific surface which favors gold absorption (Hilsher et al., 2014). At the very beginning of operations at Essakane, the carbon fines were recovered by means of a thickener and a filter press, but the circuit was undersized and inefficient. Subsequently, a decantation basin was used to settle the fines before the thickener. The settled fines were shovelled from the basin into bags. All these bags were stored in the backyard of the plant. The average tonnage of carbon fines recovered monthly was 23.5 tons with a gold grade at 1938 g/t."
Citation

APA: V. Aubé S. Bellec M. Barakate M. R. Eddahabi Y. Chaik M. Deshaies J. Girard  (2017)  What to do with CIL Carbon Fines? Iamgold’s Innovative Solution

MLA: V. Aubé S. Bellec M. Barakate M. R. Eddahabi Y. Chaik M. Deshaies J. Girard What to do with CIL Carbon Fines? Iamgold’s Innovative Solution. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2017.

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