Comparison of the Zadra, Anglo-american and Organic Procedures for Desorption of Gold From Activated Carbon
    
    - Organization:
 - The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
 - Pages:
 - 22
 - File Size:
 - 899 KB
 - Publication Date:
 - Jan 1, 1982
 
Abstract
Comparison of the Zadra, Anglo-American and organic solvent  procedures for desorption of gold from activated carbon loaded in  carbon-in-pulp gold circuits indicates that the Anglo American and the  organic solvent procedures are considerably more effective than the  commonly used Zadra procedure. Organic solvent elution procedures,  particularly those using acetonitrile and acetone, can provide  effective gold elution and very high concentrations of gold in eluate  solutions. The operational simplicity and effectiveness of the Anglo American procedure would appear to make it the most satisfactory  procedure available at the present time but this may change as the  solvent elution procedures become better developed. INTRODUCTION The carbon-in-pulp technique has been introduced into the gold  processing industry to by-pass the often lengthy CCD and filtration  steps required in the conventional Merrill Crowe cyanidation procedure  for gold recovery. Adsorption of gold on to carbon is also a valuable  technique for recovering trace amounts of gold from low level waste  streams from conventional processing procedures.
Citation
APA: (1982) Comparison of the Zadra, Anglo-american and Organic Procedures for Desorption of Gold From Activated Carbon
MLA: Comparison of the Zadra, Anglo-american and Organic Procedures for Desorption of Gold From Activated Carbon. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1982.