Rejection of Uranium from a Copper Gold Ore by Flotation (1d1c391d-4ab9-408d-ad31-42faa02f60e9)

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
J. Dong F. Ford
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
11
File Size:
1631 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2017

Abstract

"Laboratory and miniplant testwork was carried out to reject uranium from an Iron Oxide Copper Gold (IOCG) deposit that contains an average of 60-70 ppm uranium with high variability. The dominate copper bearing mineral is chalcopyrite with minor bornite and trace covellite. The main gangue minerals are iron-rich chlorite, quartz and magnetite. The main uranium-containing mineral is uraninite (UO2). Downstream processes require the maximum uranium level of no more than 80 ppm in final copper concentrate.Mineralogical examination reveals that uraninite particles are finely disseminated with grain size of less than a few microns in the deposit requiring fine regrind in order to liberate uraninite from chalcopyrite particles. A lab flowsheet was developed to include ultrafine regrind of the rougher concentrate to the particle size of 80% passing 11-13 µm with up to four stages of recleaning in flotation columns. Finer regrind to 80% passing 5-6 µm may continue to improve liberation but does not decrease uranium level in the final concentrate. In each of the successive recleaning stages by flotation column after fine regrind, uraninite is rejected into the column tailings, with the final copper gold concentrate containing less than 70 ppm uranium from a feed containing 83 ppm uranium. The conceptual flowsheet was further tested in an integrated, continuous miniplant showing average 94% copper recovery with average 74 ppm uranium. The uraninite particles that report to the final concentrate are either locked with chalcopyrite or entrained as liberated particles of less than 5 µm in size.IntroductionIron Oxide Copper Gold (IOCG) deposits are copper and gold ores hosted within a large body of iron oxide and are significant ore deposits for copper and gold (Williams, et al., 2005). These deposits can also contain economic levels of other metals such as uranium and rare earth elements. The known sizes of IOCG deposits range from 10 to 4,000 million tonnes with grade of 0.2-5% copper and 0.1-3 g/t gold. One of the greatest IOCG deposits is Olympic Dam in South Australia. It is the fourth largest copper deposit and the largest uranium deposit in the world. Gold and silver in the deposit also contribute significantly to the total revenue."
Citation

APA: J. Dong F. Ford  (2017)  Rejection of Uranium from a Copper Gold Ore by Flotation (1d1c391d-4ab9-408d-ad31-42faa02f60e9)

MLA: J. Dong F. Ford Rejection of Uranium from a Copper Gold Ore by Flotation (1d1c391d-4ab9-408d-ad31-42faa02f60e9). Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2017.

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