Minerals Beneficiation - Developments in the Application of Activated Carbon to Cyanidation Including the Desorption of Gold and Silver from Carbons

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 6
- File Size:
- 456 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1951
Abstract
IN 1939 one of the authors* described advances in carbon-cyanidation for the period 1932 to 1939 • T. G. Chapman: A Cyanide Process Based on the Simultaneous Dissolution and Adsorption of Gold. Trans. AIME (1939) 134, 207. and included: (1) the dissolution of gold in an ore pulp by cyanide and its simultaneous adsorption by carbon, (2) the stage addition of adsorptive carbon and its movement countercurrent to the flow of the ore pulp, and (3) the recycling of adsorptive carbon. Considerable additional experimental and pilot plant work have been done by the authors since 1939 and the results of such work E. H. CRABTREE, JR., Member AIME, is Director of Milling, Eagle-Picher Mining and Smelting Co., Miami, Okla., V. W. WINTERS is Superintendent, Sahuarita Concentrator, Eagle-Picher Mining and Smelting Co., Tucson, Ariz., and T. G. CHAPMAN, Member AIME, is Dean, College of Mines, University of Arizona, Tucson. AIME Sun Francisco Meeting, February 1949. TP 2744 B. Discussion (2 copies) may be sent to Transactions AIME before March 31, 1950. Manuscript received March 3, 1949. have been sufficiently encouraging to justify a second paper. Developments from 1939 to 1948: In 1941, Verne W. Winters did the first experimental work in eliminating agitation during dissolution and adsorption and thereby demonstrated that the dissolution of gold by cyanide and its simultaneous adsorption by carbon take place essentially to completion in a stagnant pulp. Shortly thereafter, and as a result of the stagnant pulp experimental work, Winters and Chapman demonstrated that soluble gold, in a cyanide ore pulp, would migrate from the ore pulp through a perforated container and be adsorbed by carbon within the container. During the same year, the Eagle-Picher Mining and Smelting Co. erected a 25-ton capacity pilot plant at the Harquahala mine about 9 miles from Salome, Ariz. Experimental work at this plant comprised chiefly the stagnant pulp modification of carbon-cyanidation although considerable work was done in the grinding and activation of carbon, and testing various methods of extracting adsorbed gold from carbon. Soon after the completion of the Harquahala
Citation
APA:
(1951) Minerals Beneficiation - Developments in the Application of Activated Carbon to Cyanidation Including the Desorption of Gold and Silver from CarbonsMLA: Minerals Beneficiation - Developments in the Application of Activated Carbon to Cyanidation Including the Desorption of Gold and Silver from Carbons. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1951.