Carbon-in-Chlorine Treatment of Refractory Gold Ores
 
    
    - Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 6
- File Size:
- 633 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1991
Abstract
The U.S. Department of Interior, Bureau of Mines, is investigating the  treatment of refractory gold ores. Chlorination in the treatment of refractory  gold ores is applicable in many low-grade gold operations. When usable,  this treatment provides an economic means of consuming sulfides and  deactivating disseminated organic carbon. Chlorination, however, is a  pretreatment technique that requires the neutralization of the chlorine prior  to leaching the ore with cyanide. Research by the Bureau has extended the  present chlorination technology to allow for the recovery of gold without  the use of cyanide and allow treatment of some ores presently deemed  untreatable by gold operators using cyanidation or chlorination/cyanidation  techniques. Chlorination without carbon of two carbonaceous ores extracted  between 1 and 20 pct of the gold; however, carbon-in-chlorine (CICL)  treatments resulted in about 90-pct recovery with a reduction in carbon  loading. A statistical design campaign for stripping metallic gold from the  carbon loaded in a chlorine environment demonstrated elutions exceeding  90 pct.
Citation
APA: (1991) Carbon-in-Chlorine Treatment of Refractory Gold Ores
MLA: Carbon-in-Chlorine Treatment of Refractory Gold Ores. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1991.
