Design of a Carbon-in-Pulp Plant from the Engineering Company Viewpoint

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
16
File Size:
163 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1982

Abstract

The process of establishing the design criteria is the key step in commencing a new project.. The method for establishing design criteria and translating them to a workable plant design is described. INTRODUCTION The use of activated charcoal to recover gold from alkaline cyanide leach liquors is the most rapidly expanding technology in hydrometallurgy today. The process, known as carbon-in-pulp (CIP), has replaced countercurrent decantation as the method for recovering gold by cyanidation. Carbon-in-pulp entails mixing activated charcoal with a ground ore-water slurry containing gold cyanide, allowing the charcoal to adsorb the gold, and then mechanically removing the gold loaded charcoal from the pulp. The pulp is sent to tailing disposal and the loaded charcoal is sent for gold bullion production. Activated charcoal's affinity for gold has been docu- mented for over one hundred years. In the first cyanide plants, one of the preferred methods of stealing gold was to place a piece
Citation

APA:  (1982)  Design of a Carbon-in-Pulp Plant from the Engineering Company Viewpoint

MLA: Design of a Carbon-in-Pulp Plant from the Engineering Company Viewpoint. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1982.

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