Leaching a Low-Grade Copper Sulfide Ore

The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Brent W. Madsen
Organization:
The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Pages:
17
File Size:
567 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1976

Abstract

The acid-ferric sulfate leaching of low-grade sulfide copper mine waste provides more than 10 percent of the U.S. supply of new copper, but recoveries and leaching rates are very low. In Federal Bureau of Mines research to improve the leaching process, experiments on 5- to 10-ton lots of mine-run ore were more revealing than bench-scale tests on fine ore. This report discusses the results obtained by leaching run-of-mine and minus 6-inch plus 112-inch samples of low-grade chalcocite-bearing mine waste. The samples were leached for 461 days and 61.6 and 37.7 percent of the copper was extracted from the minus 6-inch plus -112-inch and run-of- mine samples, respectively. A mixed kinetics model was applied successfully to the leaching of the sample with the fines removed where bulk solution transport was not rate controlling. The model, when applied to the run-of- mine ore, gave somewhat higher predicted copper extractions than experimentally determined. Subsequently, oxygen was introduced into the run-of- mine ore, leaching continued for an additional 312 days, and an additional 53.0 percent of the copper was extracted. Before the leaching experiment was dismantled and the residue sampled, the ore was treated with sulfur dioxide and its permeability was improved markedly. The results of each of these procedures are interpreted in relation to the attendant condition of the test.
Citation

APA: Brent W. Madsen  (1976)  Leaching a Low-Grade Copper Sulfide Ore

MLA: Brent W. Madsen Leaching a Low-Grade Copper Sulfide Ore. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 1976.

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