Metallurgical Challenges in the Recovery of Copper and Gold from the Chelopech Mine, Bulgaria

International Mineral Processing Congress
I. Baltov
Organization:
International Mineral Processing Congress
Pages:
8
File Size:
274 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2014

Abstract

The Chelopech Mine, located in Central Bulgaria, is one of Europe?s largest underground copper- gold mines, currently mines and processes approximately one million tonnes of ore per year. Copper concentrates containing gold and silver with significant arsenic content are produced and sold on the world markets. The operation was acquired by Dundee Precious Metals in 2003. A modernization program for the Mine and Plant has since been in progress to increase both production and mechanical reliability, and also to optimize metallurgical recoveries. Since then, mine output and plant throughput have doubled, plant availabilities and utilization have increased significantly, and overall metallurgical performance for copper and gold improved. The paper presents the systematic approach for obtaining and analyzing data, communicating it, and making suggestions for changes to the technological parameters and flowsheet in order to maximize metal recoveries. These studies have correlated the ore characteristics (particle size distributions, metal assays, and Cu and Au mineralogical and phase analyses) with the actual plant performance (kinetics, recoveries, and throughput). Cu recovery by size has been calculated from the mineralogical analyses of feed, concentrate and tails, with the most significant losses being identified in terms of fraction and phase recoveries. This has provided the recommendations (some of them tested in plant) for changes in the grinding and flotation circuits.
Citation

APA: I. Baltov  (2014)  Metallurgical Challenges in the Recovery of Copper and Gold from the Chelopech Mine, Bulgaria

MLA: I. Baltov Metallurgical Challenges in the Recovery of Copper and Gold from the Chelopech Mine, Bulgaria. International Mineral Processing Congress, 2014.

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