Minerals Beneficiation - Pilot Plant Testing of Cyanide Leaching of Copper from White Pine Tailings

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
D. H. Rose V. Lessels D. J. Buckwalter
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
4
File Size:
272 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1968

Abstract

A cyanide leaching process developed at Michigan Technological University was tested in a 12 to 24 tpd pilot plant. Flowsheet layout and equipment are described. Cyclic operation of leaching, copper precipitation by acidification, and regeneration of the cyanide leaching solution are discussed. Copper extraction and reagent consumption were as predicted by laboratory tests, and the process was proven to be technically feasible. The White Pine Copper Co., a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Copper Range Co., produces copper in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. Production in 1965 amounted to 138 million pounds of metal. An expansion program now under way will increase this by approximately one half. The highly mechanized room and pillar mine produces 18,000 tons of ore per day, which is treated in a flotation plant. The concentrate is smelted in a reverberatory furnace, the matte is blown in converters to blister copper, and the blister copper is further refined to a uniformly high-quality Lake copper, which is 100% conductive and has a silver content of 25 to 40 oz per ton. The run of the mine ore averages 22.5 lbs of copper per ton with the ore mineral occurring in the form of chalcocite. The nature of the mineralization is such that the sand tailings average a little over 4 lbs of copper per ton. Intensive research has improved copper recovery in the flotation operation to some extent, but at the scale of present operation about 12,000 tons of sands containing over 48,000 lbs of copper go to the tailings pond daily. When the plant expansion is completed, the loss of copper will be somewhat greater. In 1959, the White Pine Copper CO, initiated a study of the recovery of copper in the sand tailings. Inasmuch as the flotation operation was considered to be optimized, a logical approach seemed to be leaching. For various reasons ammonia, ferric chloride, acid, and biological leaching were ruled out as impracticable. This led to a consideration of cyanide leach-
Citation

APA: D. H. Rose V. Lessels D. J. Buckwalter  (1968)  Minerals Beneficiation - Pilot Plant Testing of Cyanide Leaching of Copper from White Pine Tailings

MLA: D. H. Rose V. Lessels D. J. Buckwalter Minerals Beneficiation - Pilot Plant Testing of Cyanide Leaching of Copper from White Pine Tailings. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1968.

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