Leaching of a Gold Ore Using the Hydrogen Sulfide-Bisulfide-Sulfur System

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
B. Wassink P. West-Sells N. Fisher
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
17
File Size:
596 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2005

Abstract

Gold leaching from a commercial cyanide-amenable gold ore was studied at 25°C using sodium bisulfide-hydrogen sulfide solutions containing elemental sulfur. Gold extraction from the ore using 0.55 M NaSH, 4.1 atm (60 PSI) H2S, 1 g/L S8 and 26% solids by weight was about as good as the best extraction obtained by cyanidation. Maximum extraction was achieved in roughly 48 hours. Sulfur dissolves in the bisulfide solutions to form a mixture of polysulfides. Simple speciation calculations indicate that gold solubility as bisulfide complexes should be roughly ten times higher than in the absence of added zerovalent sulfur. The principal bisulfide complex is believed to be [Au(HS)2]-. Gold dissolution is favoured by increasing HS- concentration and by increasing H25 pressure. Polysulfide complexes of gold are also likely to be formed, and may contribute substantially to gold leaching. Two experiments using pure gold were also performed. Up to 100 mg/L gold was dissolved in 140 hours using 0.55 M NaSH, 1 g/L added elemental sulfur and 6.2 atm H2S.
Citation

APA: B. Wassink P. West-Sells N. Fisher  (2005)  Leaching of a Gold Ore Using the Hydrogen Sulfide-Bisulfide-Sulfur System

MLA: B. Wassink P. West-Sells N. Fisher Leaching of a Gold Ore Using the Hydrogen Sulfide-Bisulfide-Sulfur System. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2005.

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