Gold Gravity Recovery at the Mill of Les Mines Camchib Inc., Chibougamau, Québec

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
A. R. Laplante L. Lui A. Cauchon
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
17
File Size:
559 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1990

Abstract

"The gravity circuit at Les Mines Camchib Inc. consists of two pinched sluices to bleed a feed to one of two 76 cm (30"") Knelson concentrator. The Knelson concentrate is upgraded to smeltable grade with a smaller Knelson (18/30 cm) and a riffleless table. Their tails are column cyanided and washed prior to recycle to the grinding circuit. This paper details size-by-size circuit performance. The Knelsons recover around 90% of free gold (as determined by Mozley Laboratory Separator), even below 37 µm. The sluices are ineffective, with upgrading ratios around 2, but approaching unity in the fine sizes. Much of the effectiveness of the circuit lies in the high gold circulating loads in the grinding circuit, which partly atone for the poor sluice performance, and the ability of the Knelsons to recover free gold. Secondary upgrading recovers slightly above 99% of the primary concentrate gold, 90% of it in a 65% Au concentrate and the balance in a heavily loaded (10 to 20 oz/st) pregnant solution. INTRODUCTIONBackgroundThe operating performance of the mill of Les Mines Camchib Inc. has been described earlier (Laplante et al., 1989). The presence of significant chalcopyrite (1 % and up) makes flotation necessary prior to cyanidation, to limit cyanide consumption and minimize environmental impact. In 1982, the presence of very high gold circulating loads in the grinding circuit lead to the commissioning of a gravity circuit, schematically shown in Figure 1. Gravity recovery of gold has been found beneficial because it increases metallurgical recovery by 1-3% (Laplante et al, 1987), as only part of the flotation tail is cyanided, and economic recovery, because of the lower net smelter return of gold in the flotation concentrate (as compared with the gravity concentrate). The latter increase is estimated, with a net smelter return of 95%, at 1.5% when gold recovery by gravity is equal to 30%. In early 1988, a sampling program was initiated to characterize the behaviour of gold in the grinding/gravity circuit. This paper reports on the results of this study."
Citation

APA: A. R. Laplante L. Lui A. Cauchon  (1990)  Gold Gravity Recovery at the Mill of Les Mines Camchib Inc., Chibougamau, Québec

MLA: A. R. Laplante L. Lui A. Cauchon Gold Gravity Recovery at the Mill of Les Mines Camchib Inc., Chibougamau, Québec. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1990.

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