Papers - Cyanidation - Cyanide Regeneration or Recovery as Practiced by the Compania Reneficiadora de Pachuea, Mexico (With Discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
C. W. Lawr
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
37
File Size:
1751 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1930

Abstract

The ores mined by the Santa Gertrudis Co. at Pachuca, Mexico, arc mainly silver-bearing; they also yield some gold and carry a little copper. Strong cyanide solutions are used to dissolve the silver and gold, and the mechanical loss of cyanide at the tailings filter has been considerable. Prior to the year 1923, the pulp, after agitation, was given a 35 to 37-min. wash with barren solution in a Butters-type leaf filter; the discharged slime cake was repulped and pumped into eight Merrill self-sluicing slime presses in which the slime was given a further wash with barren solution for 25 to 35 min., followed by a 10-min. water wash. At that time the barren solution titrated around 0.350 per cent. free KCN and 0.500 per cent. total KCN. (Aero brand cyanide is used.) It can readily be seen that a 10-min. water wash would leave considerable cyanide in the filter cake, which of course was a total loss. This averaged 0.522 kg. (1.15 Ib.) KCN per ton of solution. As the daily discharge to the dam was 1600 tons' of slime of a 2:1 ratio of liquid to solid, the value of this mechanical loss of cyanide was an important item and it's recovery held alluring possibilities. Principle of Cyanide-recovery Process As it had acquired the patent rights to theLayng (H. R.) and Halvor-sen (A. L.) processes, also those of Mills (L. D.) and Crowe (T. B.) after considerable experimental work in its own laboratory and at Tonopah, Nev., The Merrill Company of San Francisco early in 1923 notified the Mexican Corporation and compania de Santa Gertrudis of its process for the recovery of cyanide from weak wash solutions, or for the transference of cyanide from a foul mill solution to a clean alkaline solution. This method is known as the Mills-Crowe process, the principle of which is as follows: The solution from which the cyanidc is to be removed is made acid by bringing it into contact with sulfur dioxide (SO2). The acidified solution is the; transferred to a closed tank in which air and solution are brought into intimate contact. The air leaving the tank charged with HCN is then passed to another tank in which it is mixed with an alkaline solution,
Citation

APA: C. W. Lawr  (1930)  Papers - Cyanidation - Cyanide Regeneration or Recovery as Practiced by the Compania Reneficiadora de Pachuea, Mexico (With Discussion)

MLA: C. W. Lawr Papers - Cyanidation - Cyanide Regeneration or Recovery as Practiced by the Compania Reneficiadora de Pachuea, Mexico (With Discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1930.

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