The Development of the Escondida Leach Process and its Implementation in the Escondida Copper Cathode Plant
    
    - Organization:
 - The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
 - Pages:
 - 14
 - File Size:
 - 1516 KB
 - Publication Date:
 - Jan 1, 1995
 
Abstract
BHP is the world's largest copper concentrate producer with production  from mines at Escondida (Chile), Ok Tedi (Papua New Guinea), and  Island Copper (Canada). The entire concentrate production is further  processed into refined copper by third-party smelters around the world. In  anticipation of an expansion in the global copper concentrate production  capacity and a corresponding increase in treatment and refining charges  by copper smelters, BHP has continuously evaluated various  opportunities for downstream copper processing. An expansion in the  Escondida mine production, combined with BHP's interest in processing  some of its concentrate production on-shore in Chile, ultimately resulted  in the development of the Escondida Leach Process. This process was  specifically developed for higher grade concentrates, such as from  Escondida. An ammoniacal lixiviant and air are used under ambient conditions to  leach less than one-half of the contained copper values. After solid-liquid  separation, the solution is subjected to solvent extraction regenerating the  ammoniacal lixiviant and the copper loaded organic phase is stripped in  spent electrolyte returned from the electrowinning plant where ultra-high  quality SX-EW copper is produced. The solid leach residue can, if  required, be upgraded by flotation to produce a high-grade copper  concentrate with improved fuel values and a pyrite tail for disposal. After an 18-month bench and pilot plant scale program and an  engineering feasibility study, Minera Escondida Limitada decided to build  an 80 000 tonnes of copper per year facility near Antofagasta, Chile. The  installed investment cost amounted to around $160 million. The plant  went into commercial production in November 1994 and better than  99.9995 per cent Cu cathodes were produced right from the start. BHP believes that the process and the commercial plant are an  excellent example of a novel approach advancing the science of copper  metallurgy in harmony with present demands for environmentally sound  processes and high quality products.
Citation
APA: (1995) The Development of the Escondida Leach Process and its Implementation in the Escondida Copper Cathode Plant
MLA: The Development of the Escondida Leach Process and its Implementation in the Escondida Copper Cathode Plant. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1995.