The Effect of Surfactants on the Behaviour of Sulphur in the Oxidation of Chalcopyrite at Medium Temperature

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
J. D. T. Steyl
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
17
File Size:
758 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2004

Abstract

Anglo American Corporation and the University of British Columbia have developed a medium-temperature oxygen pressure leaching process for the extraction of copper from chalcopyrite concentrates in an acid-sulphate system (AAC/UBC process). Leaching is performed at 150°C and surfactants are added to disperse molten elemental sulphur from the unreacted sulphide surface to prevent liquid sulphur occlusion. Copper extractions of over 95% and elemental sulphur yields of around 60% were observed over a 2-hour average residence time in a continuous pilot autoclave. Sporadic blockages occurring under continuous conditions were found to be caused by the accumulation of molten elemental sulphur mixed with unreacted sulphide mineral. A batch programme of experimentation was undertaken to establish the reason for this phenomenon. Batch experiments were conducted at low pulp densities on concentrate samples with narrow size distributions and at similar solution compositions to those experienced in the pilot autoclave. The overall rate of chalcopyrite oxidation was shown, under approximately constant solution composition, to be a strong function of the total available mineral surface area. Initial copper extraction rates followed the shrinking particle kinetic model under intrinsic surface control. Deviation from shrinking particle kinetics was however observed after a certain oxidation time. Secondary electron images identified small (typically less than 20 µm) sulphur conglomerates at the point of deviation, which 'collected' unreacted chalcopyrite mineral particles and lowered the total mineral surface area available for oxidation. These sulphur clusters are thought to be the precursor for blockages experienced in the continuous pilot autoclave. These results emphasised the importance of fine grinding (P80 5-20 µm) and suggest that shorter residence times may minimise the formation of sulphur conglomerates in a continuous autoclave operating at medium temperature.
Citation

APA: J. D. T. Steyl  (2004)  The Effect of Surfactants on the Behaviour of Sulphur in the Oxidation of Chalcopyrite at Medium Temperature

MLA: J. D. T. Steyl The Effect of Surfactants on the Behaviour of Sulphur in the Oxidation of Chalcopyrite at Medium Temperature. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2004.

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