Financial Risk Analysis of a Carbon Fines Capture Methodology

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
D. Weirmeir Z. Yamak M. Somppi
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
7
File Size:
323 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2019

Abstract

"Milling operations commonly employ activated carbon to capture complexed gold from lixiviants in leaching processes. As the carbon moves through pipes, pumps, vessels, kilns and other processes in the gold leaching circuit, this consumable may experience losses by various mechanisms like attrition, breakage, and rupturing. Whenever possible, capturing the fine gold-bearing carbon portion of this stream could provide value to milling operations at low capital cost and manageable financial risk. Identifying, testing, and validating the successful payback of a low-tech flocculant system is described. However, the work more closely explores a Monte Carlo risk-based methodology for understanding the potential payback of this project at various confidence levels – an approach that many improvement projects can follow where some level of uncertainty exists.INTRODUCTION Gold milling operations commonly employ activated carbon to adsorb gold from solutions. Normal handling causes the carbon particles from this material to abrade, break, rupture to a size that becomes too small for further use in the process. Operations often concentrate on capturing the fine particles because gold is associated with the carbon and this metal content can be a valuable revenue stream for toll processing. However, the small particle sizes become difficult to separate from the process and can ultimately leave the facility in the waste stream. Hence, operations often place a great deal of care in capturing as much fine carbon as possible by a variety of methods including using screens, settling tanks, and chemical methods. Retrofitting a circuit to capture more carbon fines is common but can expose the operation to financial risk. Approaching this potential improvement by leveraging a Monte Carlo methodology can be effective in understanding the risk and the associated payback of a project at various confidence levels. This method provides a strong framework for capital go-no-go decisions and the structure to validate the potential project success before implementation."
Citation

APA: D. Weirmeir Z. Yamak M. Somppi  (2019)  Financial Risk Analysis of a Carbon Fines Capture Methodology

MLA: D. Weirmeir Z. Yamak M. Somppi Financial Risk Analysis of a Carbon Fines Capture Methodology. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2019.

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