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Dissolution of gold during pyrite oxidation reaction
Affiliation:1. CSIRO Minerals, PO Box 90, Bentley 6982, Australia;2. Western Australian School of Mines, Curtin University, GPO Box U1987, Perth 6845, Australia;1. Division of Sustainable Resources Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, Hokkaido University, Sapporo 060-8628, Japan;2. Department of Mining and Petroleum Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok 10330, Thailand;1. University of Craiova, Department of Chemistry, Calea Bucuresti 107I, Craiova 200478, Romania;2. CEA, DEN, DPC/SEARS/LISL, Bât. 391, F-91191 Gif-sur-Yvette, France;3. University of Evry-Val d''Essonne, LAMBE, F-91025 Evry, France
Abstract:Numerous papers discuss the mechanism of alkaline oxidation of pyrite but there is limited information available describing the actual kinetics of the pyrite sulphide to thiosulphate reaction. A previous investigation in this series determined the rate of sulphide sulphur oxidation and thiosulphate yield in the reaction of pyrite with sodium hydroxide under various testing conditions. The goal of the current study is to validate these rates using two different gold-containing pyrite concentrates. A further objective of the current work is to investigate the simultaneous dissolution of gold with in situ formed thiosulphate during pyrite oxidation.It was found that at 20 psi oxygen overpressure and a temperature of 80 °C, the initial rate of sulphide oxidation and thiosulphate yield were close to 0.08 mol/h and 0.0155 mol/h, respectively. These rates are in agreement with previously published data. However, a shift from linearity occurred when the pH decreased below 12. A rapid decay of thiosulphate was evidenced at pH 8.3–9.2 while EH was in the range of 22–141 mV. Based on relevant thermodynamic analysis of metastable thiosalts system, such rapid decomposition is not expected at these pH and EH values. It is believed that the presence of unreacted pyrite acting as a catalyst caused this behaviour. It appears that under mildly alkaline conditions, the rate of oxidation of sulphide to thiosulphate becomes slower than the rate of thiosulphate degradation, which causes a net loss of thiosulphate in the system. The maximum extraction of gold and silver (96% and 75% respectively) was achieved under conditions of pH < 12.
Keywords:Alkaline oxidation of pyrite  Thiosulphate yield  Gold and silver leaching rates
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