Leaching Coarse Native Copper Ore With Dilute Ammonium Carbonate Solution

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
R. D. Groves T. H. Jeffers G. M. Potter
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
9
File Size:
326 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1974

Abstract

Experiments on ammonium carbonate leaching of native copper ores crushed to 1-inch size showed that in 30 days 55 percent of the copper was extracted from 0.7 percent copper conglomerate-type ore, and 85 percent was extracted from 2.1 percent copper amygdaloid-type ore. Cupric ions were not necessary to initiate leaching, and dilute solution containing only 2.2 grams per liter NH3 and 1.9 grams CO, was a suitable solvent. Copper was recovered from the leach liquor by solvent extraction and electrolysis of the strip solution. Cyclic testing of the leach-solvent extraction-electrolytic procedure is in progress on a 6-ton charge of minus 12-inch conglomerate-type ore assaying 2.2 percent copper. Oxygen is metered to the closed leach vessel as required by the leaching reaction. Initial copper dissolution was much slower than from minus 1-inch ore, but the leaching rate then markedly improved.
Citation

APA: R. D. Groves T. H. Jeffers G. M. Potter  (1974)  Leaching Coarse Native Copper Ore With Dilute Ammonium Carbonate Solution

MLA: R. D. Groves T. H. Jeffers G. M. Potter Leaching Coarse Native Copper Ore With Dilute Ammonium Carbonate Solution. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1974.

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