Biological Processes for Gold Recovery

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
I R. F MacCulloch
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
6
File Size:
334 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2004

Abstract

Bacterial oxidation of sulfide minerals is a familiar and commercially available process to enhance gold recovery with problem ores. Pintail Systems, a Colorado, USA based company had developed bio-processes for gold recovery based on natural mineral formation and transformation in a global mineral cycle. The biological recovery of precious metals from ore involves a number of mechanisms that are dependent on the metal-mineralogical association. These processes include: partial bio-oxidation of sulfide ores; oxidation of gangue minerals exposing gold to leaching; surfactant properties of bacteria/nutrient solutions that improve wettability of ores and solution contact with leachable gold and silver; and microbial production and excretion of trace amounts of gold lixiviants, and bio-fracturing or biological alteration of ore minerals. Pintail has demonstrated enhanced recovery of precious metals during cyanide detoxification of spent heaps at the end of mine life. Biological recovery processes also have the potential to be applied to in situ mining technologies. The in situ process application could recover gold from subgrade deposits, small deposits or those ore bodies with uneconomic stripping ratios for conventional mining. In situ biomining can be accomplished at a fraction of the cost of conventional mining and leaching and does not have the environmental liabilities associated with many conventional gold lixiviants.
Citation

APA: I R. F MacCulloch  (2004)  Biological Processes for Gold Recovery

MLA: I R. F MacCulloch Biological Processes for Gold Recovery. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2004.

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