RI 8268 Carbon-in-Pulp Silver Adsorption From Cyanide Leach Slurries of a Silver Ore

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
S. J. Hussey
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
26
File Size:
1278 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1978

Abstract

The Bureau of Mines investigated the applicability of carbon-in-pulp pro-cess for recovering silver from low-grade ores. The reasons for the research were (1) to illustrate a practical procedure for the process design of carbon-in-pulp adsorption circuits using leach slurries and simple equipment; and (2) to illustrate how equations of adsorption theory relating rate data and equilibrium adsorption curves can be helpful in process design. Carbon-in-pulp silver adsorption tests were made on Banner, Idaho; mine-run ore samples with silver contents ranging from 2.0 to 8.5 oz/ton and variations in cyanide leach extraction from 48 to 93 pet. The lower recoveries were attributed to the presence of complex silver sulfide minerals. Carbon-in-pulp batch adsorption tests provided rate data for the estimation of a silver equilibrium adsorption curve. Process design procedures in which the rate data were related to an equilibrium adsorption curvey by equations of adsorption theory were used to plan a four-stage pilot plant cascade. The pilot plant was successfully operated for 45 hr of countercurrent flow, producing a carbon product containing a mean silver loading of 571 oz/ton from a pregnant solution of 1.7 oz/ton of silver. Virtually all of the dissolved silver was recovered on the carbon.
Citation

APA: S. J. Hussey  (1978)  RI 8268 Carbon-in-Pulp Silver Adsorption From Cyanide Leach Slurries of a Silver Ore

MLA: S. J. Hussey RI 8268 Carbon-in-Pulp Silver Adsorption From Cyanide Leach Slurries of a Silver Ore. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1978.

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