Notes on Ore Pulp Settlement and Filtration, In Cyanidation of Gold Ores

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
8
File Size:
101 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1935

Abstract

This subject of paramount importance in many modern plants employed in the extraction of gold from ores by cyanidation, involves several considerations.With the old-type "slimes decantation" process, using several tanks of large dimension, installed at high capital cost, it was frequently possible to obtain good settlement over a protracted period, but the disability of indifferent response to subsequent filtration and washing of the residual pulp, after decantation of the supernatant pregnant solution, was often present.In modern cyanidation practice, the tendency is to reduce capital expenditure by continuous processing of the ore pulp in a plant of less volume, but capable of handling more tonnage through-put and yielding, coincidently, less residual dissolved gold in the final pulp residues.INHIBITORY FACTORS.These involve a study of the effect of the circuit water or solution employed in milling and treatment, the amount of "primary" slime occurring in the ore broken underground, the constitution of the "walls" underground, the inherent occurrence of colloidal slime in partially decomposed ore, and the presence of kaolinised and ferruginous clayey structures carrying payable infiltrations of gold values, to mention some of the troubles encountered in practice. Practically all the difficulties occurring are due to the presence of colloids (using the metallurgical as apart from the chemical definition of the term), either...
Citation

APA:  (1935)  Notes on Ore Pulp Settlement and Filtration, In Cyanidation of Gold Ores

MLA: Notes on Ore Pulp Settlement and Filtration, In Cyanidation of Gold Ores. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1935.

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