Leaching of chalcopyrite concentrate using extreme thermophilic bacteria

The application of thermophilic bacteria to the leaching of a chalcopyrite (CuFeS2) concentrate from the Gibraltar Mine has been investigated in both shake flask and stirred tank reactor experiments. The conventional hydrometallurgical treatment of chalcopyrite is difficult due to a surface pass...

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Main Author: Timmins, Michael Glenn
Language:English
Published: 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/11463
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVAU.2429-114632014-03-14T15:44:55Z Leaching of chalcopyrite concentrate using extreme thermophilic bacteria Timmins, Michael Glenn The application of thermophilic bacteria to the leaching of a chalcopyrite (CuFeS2) concentrate from the Gibraltar Mine has been investigated in both shake flask and stirred tank reactor experiments. The conventional hydrometallurgical treatment of chalcopyrite is difficult due to a surface passivation phenomenon of the leaching particles. This passivation can be overcome through biological leaching at temperatures exceeding 50°C. The thermophilic leaching system is characterized by low temperatures (with respect to autoclave processes), high acidity and most importantly, a low redox potential. Due to the thermodynamic, chemical and biological properties inherent to high temperature bioleaching, the redox potential of the leaching slurry is held within the narrow potential range of 500 - 600 mV SHE. It is thought that in this range, chalcopyrite can be leached successfully. Of the various thermophilic species selected, a mixed thermophilic culture (growing at 70°C) outperformed all other thermophiles as well as the standard mesophile (growing at 35°C). It was observed that the thermophilic system is very sensitive to changes in temperature and consequently, leaching at the highest possible temperature (80-85°C) is advantageous. Inhibitions due to copper revealed that bacterial activity and therefore the leaching rate begins to be inhibited at copper concentrations above 10 g/L. Stirred tank reactor (STR) experiments resulted in copper extractions in excess of 90 % in 15 days. Approximately 75 to 99 % of the sulfide oxidized reported as elemental sulfur. It was found that the relative rates of leaching and the extent of sulfide oxidation (copper extraction) decreased with increasing pulp density over the range 2 to 10 %. Thermophilic bioleaching of the Gibraltar concentrate is thought to proceed under a biologically assisted indirect chemical leaching mechanism with the avoidance of chalcopyrite passivation as the result of low solution ORP. 2009-07-29T18:24:00Z 2009-07-29T18:24:00Z 2001 2009-07-29T18:24:00Z 2001-05 Electronic Thesis or Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/11463 eng UBC Retrospective Theses Digitization Project [http://www.library.ubc.ca/archives/retro_theses/]
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description The application of thermophilic bacteria to the leaching of a chalcopyrite (CuFeS2) concentrate from the Gibraltar Mine has been investigated in both shake flask and stirred tank reactor experiments. The conventional hydrometallurgical treatment of chalcopyrite is difficult due to a surface passivation phenomenon of the leaching particles. This passivation can be overcome through biological leaching at temperatures exceeding 50°C. The thermophilic leaching system is characterized by low temperatures (with respect to autoclave processes), high acidity and most importantly, a low redox potential. Due to the thermodynamic, chemical and biological properties inherent to high temperature bioleaching, the redox potential of the leaching slurry is held within the narrow potential range of 500 - 600 mV SHE. It is thought that in this range, chalcopyrite can be leached successfully. Of the various thermophilic species selected, a mixed thermophilic culture (growing at 70°C) outperformed all other thermophiles as well as the standard mesophile (growing at 35°C). It was observed that the thermophilic system is very sensitive to changes in temperature and consequently, leaching at the highest possible temperature (80-85°C) is advantageous. Inhibitions due to copper revealed that bacterial activity and therefore the leaching rate begins to be inhibited at copper concentrations above 10 g/L. Stirred tank reactor (STR) experiments resulted in copper extractions in excess of 90 % in 15 days. Approximately 75 to 99 % of the sulfide oxidized reported as elemental sulfur. It was found that the relative rates of leaching and the extent of sulfide oxidation (copper extraction) decreased with increasing pulp density over the range 2 to 10 %. Thermophilic bioleaching of the Gibraltar concentrate is thought to proceed under a biologically assisted indirect chemical leaching mechanism with the avoidance of chalcopyrite passivation as the result of low solution ORP.
author Timmins, Michael Glenn
spellingShingle Timmins, Michael Glenn
Leaching of chalcopyrite concentrate using extreme thermophilic bacteria
author_facet Timmins, Michael Glenn
author_sort Timmins, Michael Glenn
title Leaching of chalcopyrite concentrate using extreme thermophilic bacteria
title_short Leaching of chalcopyrite concentrate using extreme thermophilic bacteria
title_full Leaching of chalcopyrite concentrate using extreme thermophilic bacteria
title_fullStr Leaching of chalcopyrite concentrate using extreme thermophilic bacteria
title_full_unstemmed Leaching of chalcopyrite concentrate using extreme thermophilic bacteria
title_sort leaching of chalcopyrite concentrate using extreme thermophilic bacteria
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/11463
work_keys_str_mv AT timminsmichaelglenn leachingofchalcopyriteconcentrateusingextremethermophilicbacteria
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