Understanding gangue acid consumption in copper sulfide heap leaching: Predicting the impact of carbonates, silicates and secondary precipitates

2021 ◽  
Vol 171 ◽  
pp. 107090
Author(s):  
Mark Thomas
2017 ◽  
Vol 262 ◽  
pp. 99-102
Author(s):  
Tatsuya Shinkawa ◽  
Tadashi Chida ◽  
So Furukawa ◽  
Taro Kamiya

JOGMEC has been carrying out the study on primary copper sulfide ores leaching for recovering copper economically and efficiently by heap leaching. In our study, we have been using the primary copper sulfide ore produced in an IOCG deposit. The ore is characterized by high iron content and high acid consumption in leaching. For the optimization of the leaching, the conditions such as ore size, agglomeration, pH and irrigation rate of leaching solution were examined with column leach tests. The best result was over 80 % extraction of copper in 150 days with leaching solution of 1 M sulfuric acid and temperature of 45 °C. In this experiment, the fines of the ore sample were removed before putting it into the column to keep the permeability of the ore bed. In these column leach tests, the Fe2+/total-Fe ratio of PLS decreased gradually by the activity of naturally grown iron-oxidizing bacteria. The bacteria in PLS, which have the ability of iron-oxidizing and sulfur-oxidizing, were identified by next-generation sequencing as Acidithiobacillus caldus and Sulfobacillus thermosulfidooxidans. We also carried out bench-scale tests with about 200 tons of the primary copper sulfide ores. Iron-oxidizing and sulfur-oxidizing bacteria were identified in the leaching solution as same with column leach tests. It is considered that the bacteria worked in the leaching solution and on the surface of the ores.


SEG Discovery ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 13-25 ◽  
Author(s):  
John E. Dreier

Editor’s note: The Geology and Mining series, edited by Dan Wood and Jeffrey Hedenquist, is designed to introduce early-career professionals and students to a variety of topics in mineral exploration, development, and mining, in order to provide insight into the many ways in which geoscientists contribute to the mineral industry. Abstract Copper production by heap leaching, coupled with solvent extraction and electrowinning (SX-EW), is a well-established technology, with an annual output of about 3.7 million tonnes (Mt) of copper metal. Ores presently amenable to copper heap leaching include copper oxides and secondary copper sulfides. Most copper deposits amenable to acid sulfate heap leaching result from supergene processes within porphyry copper systems, although copper heap leaching has been applied to sandstone and shale-hosted deposits, among others. Copper heap leaching is a rate-dependent process sensitive to copper mineralogy (copper oxides > secondary sulfides > hypogene sulfides), driven by the pH of the leach solution, the activity of ferric iron (Fe3+ (aq)) dissolved in the leach solution, and temperature. Acid consumption, a principal operating cost item, depends on the pH of the leach solution; the presence of reactive gangue minerals, notably carbonates, Ca plagioclase, pyroxene, Fe-rich amphibole, and olivine; and the cumulative surface area of material in the heap. There are three basic approaches to commercial copper heap leaching—run-of-mine, dedicated pad, and on-off pad leaching, with variables that include crushing, acid/ferric agglomeration, solution application rate, and leach solution pH. These approaches affect copper leach kinetics, overall copper recovery, acid consumption, and capital and operating costs. A successful copper heap leach evaluation program requires a systematic approach, beginning with geologic mapping, then drilling and hydraulic and metallurgical testing, and concluding with financial analysis, engineering, and permitting. As geologists are the unique party in the process, with a thorough understanding of the overall deposit geology, including ore and gangue mineralogy, the domains that comprise the deposit, and the geochemistry of leaching, they must remain fully involved in the project throughout the evaluation. At the outset, geologists must manage the drilling program and define the grade-mineral domains. Later, they must participate in the metallurgical and hydraulic testing programs, including the evaluation of test results; then, during financial modeling, they must collaborate with all of the other specialists.


2015 ◽  
Vol 1130 ◽  
pp. 218-221 ◽  
Author(s):  
Denis W. Shiers ◽  
David M. Collinson ◽  
Helen R. Watling

Strains ofSulfobacillus (S.)andAlicyclobacillusspecies have been identified/detected in managed bioleaching heaps and agitated tanks using culture-dependent and culture-independent methods.S thermosulfidooxidansoxidises both iron(II) and reduced inorganic sulfur compounds (RISC). Several strains were isolated from a copper sulfide heap in North Western Australia.Alicyclobacillusstrain FP1 (FP1) was also isolated from the heap and oxidises iron(II) but not RISC. However, the species exhibit differentiating characteristics during growth on D-glucose, which has been explored using a suite of monitoring and measurement techniques. As examples, a growth factor (yeast extract) is essential for FP1 but not forS. thermosulfidooxidans, although yeast extract is beneficial to the latter. FP1 grows well on glucose, compared with the poor-to-no growth ofS. thermosulfidooxidanson the substrate. Solution pH strongly influences the activity of both species when grown on organic substrates, suggesting a pivotal role for solution acidity in the growth and activity of heterotrophs or mixotrophs in heap leach systems. This research forms part of an ongoing development of a data base with which to interpret the impacts of leaching conditions in heaps on microbial activity without having to disrupt metal production by invasive sampling campaigns. The insights gained will assist in understanding the effects that changing conditions in heaps due to acid consumption and/or increased element concentrations in process water may have on microbial activity.


2011 ◽  
Vol 311-313 ◽  
pp. 948-952
Author(s):  
Ji Chun Yang ◽  
Nan Liu

In order to explore the influence of the nitrogen concentrations on the impact toughness of the bearing steel GCr15,impact testing has been conducted on the steel samples with variant nitrogen contents (0.1-0.3 wt.%) on the tester JB-30B, and the fracture morphology of the samples after impact was investigated using scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and optical microscopy (OM). The results indicate that the impact toughness of the steel GCr15 with 0.1 wt.% nitrogen exhibits the lowest values with typical quasi-cleavage feature. The steel GCr15 with 0.2 wt.% nitrogen presents the maximum values in impact toughness associated with significant plastic deformation, suggesting ductile nature. The steel with 0.3 wt.% nitrogen presents a quasi-cleavage feature, and micro cracks observed beside the secondary precipitates. The impact toughness values of the steel with 0.3 wt.% nitrogen are higher than that with 0.1 wt.% nitrogen and lower than with 0.2 wt.% nitrogen. The results are valuable for a large-scale bench marked industrial manufacture of the bearing steel GCr15 with the optimized nitrogen concentrations.


Author(s):  
Jingwen Su ◽  
Ryan Mathur ◽  
Glen Brumm ◽  
Peter D’Amico ◽  
Linda Godfrey ◽  
...  

Copper mining in Tongling has occurred since the Bronze Age, and this area is known as one of the first historic places where copper has been, and is currently, extracted. Multiple studies have demonstrated, through concentrated work on soils and waters, the impact of mining in the area. Here we present copper isotope values of 13 ore samples, three tailing samples, 20 water samples (surface and groundwater), and 94 soil samples (15 different profiles ranging in depth from 0–2 m) from proximal to distal (up to 10 km) locations radiating from a tailings dam and tailings pile. Oxidation of the copper sulfide minerals results in isotopically heavier oxidized copper. Thus, copper sourced from sulfide minerals has been used to trace copper in mining and environmental applications. At Tongling, higher copper isotope values (greater than 1 per mil, which are interpreted to be derived from copper sulfide weathering) are found both in waters and the upper portions of soils (5–100 cm) within 1 km of the source tailings. At greater than 1 km, the soils do not possess heavier copper isotope values; however, the stream water samples that have low copper concentrations have heavier values up to 6.5 km from the source. The data suggest that copper derived from the mining activities remains relatively proximal in the soils but can be traced in the waters at greater distances.


2013 ◽  
Vol 825 ◽  
pp. 344-347 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ai Xiang Wu ◽  
Bao Hua Yang ◽  
Jin Zhi Liu ◽  
Xiu Xiu Miao

Heap bio-leaching technology is extensively applied to recover metals from low-grade complex ores in the mining industry, particularly the copper sulfide ores. Understanding the effect of bio-leaching process on the pore structure of packed particle beds is important to enhance the percolation and leaching performances with respect to design and operation of heap leaching system. The porosity, pore size distribution and degree of pore connectivity are the three most important features correlated with fluid flow in heap leaching operation. In this study, a spiral X-ray CT scanner, combined with 3D imaging and analysis, was used to characterize the complex pore structure of the packed ore particle beds before and after bioleaching copper sulfide ores. The results indicate that the pore structure has temporal and spatial variations during bio-leaching process.


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