REVIEW ON HEAP LEACHING OF COPPER ORES - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 21
About This Presentation
Title:

REVIEW ON HEAP LEACHING OF COPPER ORES

Description:

HEAP LEACHING OF COPPER ORES Carlos Avenda o V. Sociedad Terral S.A. * The common approach observes the ore behavior, which has been detected through test work ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:855
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 22
Provided by: CarlosA169
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: REVIEW ON HEAP LEACHING OF COPPER ORES


1
REVIEW ON HEAP LEACHING OF COPPER ORES
  • Carlos AvendaƱo V.
  • Sociedad Terral S.A.

2
  • The common approach observes the ore
  • behavior, which has been detected through
    test work
  • and experience, with minimum manipulation.

Terrals Approach
- Recognizes the characteristics and behavior of
the ore. - Separates the conditions to be
observed and the available degrees of freedom. -
Conciliates both aspects, establishing and
reaching an objective based on the economical
criteria of the operation.
3
  • AN IDEAL LEACHING
  • Must maximize metallurgical recoveries.
  • Must minimize consumption of acid, water and
    energy.
  • Must consider that the resulting PLS complies
    with
  • the copper and acid conditions, which will be
    further required
  • by the SX plant in order to maintain its maximum
    efficiency.
  • Must generate a clean PLS, without suspended
    solids,
  • colloids, iron, chlorine, manganese or total
    sulfates, so that
  • transfers to the electrolyte and risks of crud
    formation are
  • minimized.

4
  • AN IDEAL LEACHING
  • Must eliminate the effects of eventual reducers
    and clays with ion exchange capacity and complex
    silicates in the ore.
  • Curing doses - when used - must be calculated
    in a way that they are consistent with
  • - Maximum benefit of kinetics,
  • - Minimum enhancement of the acid consumption
    and
  • contribution to excess in the PLS
  • - No inclusion, or minimum amount, of soluble
    impurities in
  • the PLS.
  • Must avoid formation of phreatic layers and
    local flooding that might cause channeling,
    slipping or heap erosion.

5
  • AN IDEAL LEACHING
  • Ideally, it must allow a joint treatment of
    ores with diverse mineralogy, including oxide and
    sulfide species.
  • Must allow managing the iron behavior, in order
    to
  • - ensure that the required quantities and
    ratios of ferric- ferrous are present, allowing
    to regenerate acid, to create oxidizing
    conditions and to co-precipitate impurities
  • - avoid formation of ferric colloidal
    precipitates, which promote channeling of
    solutions
  • - allow water removal from the precipitates
    when these formations cannot be prevented
  • - ensure the appropriate contents for
    bacterial activity in sulfide leaching.

6
  • 1. THE BASIC EQUATION
  • ACID CONTRIBUTION CONSUMPTION ACID
    EXCESS
  • - By copper and by gangue
  • The acid excess only appears
  • when consumption is
  • finished.
  • - In Curing
  • - In Irrigation
  • - By internal generation

The equity problem deals with the fact that
gangue acid consumption depends on the acid
availability (at least within a range)
therefore, the consumption also depends on the
contribution and the terms of the equation are
mutually dependent.
7
  • If ACID CONTRIBUTION lt ACID CONSUMPTION
  • Then - Metallurgical recovery is affected
  • If ACID CONTRIBUTION gt ACID CONSUMPTION
  • Then
  • A maximum metallurgical recovery is almost
    achieved
  • A good kinetics is obtained
  • - The net consumption" of acid increases
  • - Impurities are incorporated to the solutions
  • - Acid excess in PLS may occur

8
  • If ACID CONTRIBUTION ACID CONSUMPTION
  • UNDER LOW ACID CONCENTRATION IN A PLS AND WITHIN
    AN ENVIRONMENT THAT PROMOTES REDOX REACTIONS.
  • Then we can expect
  • Positive effects
  • Iron and copper oxidation are triggered
  • Interfering agents are inactivated reducers
    are oxidized and
  • clays with ion exchange capacity remain
    passive
  • A maximum metallurgical recovery is achieved,
    due to the
  • contribution of both Fe3 in sulfide
    leaching, and Cu0 , which was
  • precipitated by reducers.
  • Decreased consumption of net acid.
  • Solutions are cleaned and fewer impurities are
    added to the
  • system.
  • Negative effects
  • Kinetics is affected

9
  • 2. The irrigation ratio
  • The irrigation ratio provides irrigation
    solutions that activate the Physical-Chemistry of
    the system.
  • It is associated to the conditions that
    determine
  • - the required acid to obtain the copper
    concentrations, acid and impurities that were
    targeted in the PLS,
  • the interactions among the kinetics of copper
    recovery, of acid consumption and impurity
    dissolution, and
  • the definition of a feasible recovery target,
    under economical criteria based on both the
    conditions studied in metallurgical tests and in
    the operation.

10
The way to use the irrigation ratio leads to
leaching techniques, which contain
parameters and dependent variables.
The combination of both will lead to process
configurations that, simultaneously,
solve the operational problems, which are
usually related to
Mineral handling Crushing, agglomeration,
loading and heap configuration. Solutions
handling Irrigation configuration, sequence of
solution application, irrigation media and rates,
forms of collection of solutions, water
consumption. Operational aspects Drag of fines,
flooding and channeling of solutions, heap
erosion, air injection and others.
11
  • ACID IMPURITIES BALANCE
  • 1st Series of Reactions
  • 4 FeSO4(impregn) O2(gas) 10 H2O 4
    Fe(OH)3(solid) 4 H2SO4(solut.)
  • 4 Fe(OH)3(solid) 6 H2SO4(solut.) 2
    Fe2(SO4)3(solut.) 12 H2O
  • 4 FeSO4(impregn.) O2(gas) 2 H2SO4(solut.) 2
    Fe2(SO4)3(solut.) 2 H2O
  • Iron species dissolve mainly to Fe2 state.
  • - Fe2 impregnates the rock when irrigation is
    stopped.
  • - Fe3 is oxidized upon contact with gasified
    air or by bacterial action, and
  • - Fe3 changes to hydrolyzed state, either
    simple or complex.
  • - The hydrolyzed Fe3 is re-dissolved in the
    following irrigation acid, consuming 0,86 Kg of
    fresh acid/Kg of oxidized ferric ion.
  • Fe3 eventually participates in redox reactions
    and returns to ferrous
  • state Fe2.

12
  • 2nd Series of Reactions
  • Combining the previous reaction with
  • 12 FeSO4(impregn.) 3
    O2(gas) 6 H2O 4 Fe(OH)3(solid) 4
    Fe2(SO4)3(soluc.)
  • 4Fe(OH)3(solid)4Fe2(SO4)3(solut.)2Na2SO412H2O
    4NaFe3(SO4)2(OH)6(solid) 6H2SO4(solut.)
  • 12FeSO4(impregn.) 3O2(gas) 6H2O
    2Na2SO4 4NaFe3(SO4)2(OH)6(solid)
    6H2SO4(solut.)
  • - Consequent oxidizations from the 1st Series are
    repeated, or
  • - the previous hydrolyzing Fe3 participates
    re-dissolved, according to reactions.
  • - When pH increases due to mineral acid
    consumption and the presence of other ions,
    formation of jarosites occurs.
  • - Thus, solutions lose iron (Fe3), sulfates
    (1,15 Kg/KgFe) and other ions that are present
    (e.g. Na 0,13 Kg/KgFe) by precipitation,
    which is virtually permanent, and 0,86 Kg of
    sulfuric acid/Kg of precipitated iron.
  • - Consequently, jarosites contribute to impurity
    elimination from the solutions and to the return
    of part of the consumed acid.
  • The various jarosites incorporate other co-abated
    elements (Mg, Al and others) .
  • Jarosites are re-dissolved in environments with
    higher acidity than the one in which they were
    formed.

13
  • The concentration of Fe3 ions available in the
    solution depends on the balance between
  • FERRIC CONTRIBUTIONS FERRIC
    CONSUMPTION
  • By
  • Initial presence of Fe3
  • Presence of Fe2 oxidization
  • Re-dissolution of hydrolyzed Fe3
  • By
  • Fe3 consumption from the ore
  • and reduction to Fe2
  • - Precipitation of jarosites
  • The causes of the balance cannot be possibly
    analyzed in leaching
  • Accounting of the especies is external it
    measures outgoing and incoming ions. Only the
    consequent overall abatement or dissolution
  • is observed.
  • Meanwhile, many dissolutions and ion abatements
    take place at the same time inside the test,
    which are recorded from outside.
  • Thus, the quantity of precipitates can only be
    detected through the
  • gravel mineralogy, but not through metallurgical
    accounting

14
  • INTERMITTENT OR PULSE IRRIGATION
  • Leaching takes place over a sequence of short
    irrigation and resting periods
  • Resting periods allow solution drainage and
    squeezing
  • the particles remain humid but with no liquid
    that may isolate them from the air in the ore bed

15
  • Metallurgical Effects
  • A decrease in the required irrigation ratio
    to achieve target recovery, since the mineral
    particles absorb the reagents of each of the new
    irrigation solutions more easily and efficiently.
    Likewise, products are also poured off during
    squeezing in each resting stage.
  • This effect makes it unnecessary to urge on
    irrigation rates for improving kinetics and
    recoveries and, at the same time, avoids
    impairment of the copper concentration of the
    PLS.

16
  • Physical-Chemical Effects
  • Particles exposure to air during pulses,
    oxidizes the reducers as well as the metallic
    copper precipitated by them it alters and
    inhibits the action of clays with ion exchange
    capacity and the formation of colloidal and
    silicates during the process.
  • Particles exposure to air allows oxidation of
    Fe2 impregnated ions, which easily precipitate
    by hydrolysis, but in a disseminated way and with
    minimum amounts of water, which avoids formation
    of colloidal gels that cause channelling.
  • When association with other ions is possible,
    part of the hydrolyzed Fe3 will dissolve when
    acid is made available in the subsequent
    irrigation, and part of the iron will precipitate
    to the state of disseminated jarosites almost
    permanently.
  • In bacterial leaching, it provides oxygen to
    bacteria.

17
  • Physical-Chemical Effects
  • Re-dissolved Fe3 ions support copper recovery
    and return to the Fe2 state, and then repeat
    the cycle in the following irrigation pulse,
    according to acid availability in the next
    irrigation solutions.
  • In the permanent precipitation of jarosites,
    ions from impurities are markedly dragged through
    diverse mechanisms among them a considerable
    portion of chlorides and sulfates.
  • Depending on the pH environment around the Fe2
    ion, when oxidizing to Fe3 occurs during the
    resting period, the acid is partially
    regenerated, which joins the new solution as an
    active agent, being then deducted from external
    consumption.

18
  • Hydraulic effects
  • Decreased channeling, because during the
    resting periods of each pulse, the previous
    irrigation channeling is erased, which compels
    formation of new access routes in the following
    irrigation cycle.
  • Flooding and heap slipping risks decrease,
    since it is possible to perform ore bed drainage
    before saturation.
  • During resting periods, the huge colloidal
    jarosite gels are dehydrated and change into the
    most dehydrated sol state - - smaller in size -
    which maintains the ore bed porosity.

19
(No Transcript)
20
(No Transcript)
21
  • CONCLUSIONS
  • - Metallurgical recovery can be a target goal -
    and not necessarily a result or a variable
    depending on the ore -within a range that is
    usually bigger than expected.
  • - This target recovery goal is limited by
    economical factors that are associated to the
    leaching techniques.
  • - Different leaching techniques involve different
    kinetics and costs.
  • - Consequently, the main independent variable is
    the most convenient leaching technique to
    achieve the target recovery.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com