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Bioleaching CORALES COGNIS

This document discusses copper sulfide bioleaching and the factors that affect the microorganisms involved. It describes the types of microorganisms commonly used in bioleaching, including mesophiles, moderate thermophiles, and extremophiles. The key factors that impact the microorganisms are identified as temperature, oxidation-reduction potential, pH, oxygen, carbon dioxide, nutrients, energy source, anion toxicity, salinity, and process reagents. The mechanisms and pathways of bioleaching are also summarized.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
51 views28 pages

Bioleaching CORALES COGNIS

This document discusses copper sulfide bioleaching and the factors that affect the microorganisms involved. It describes the types of microorganisms commonly used in bioleaching, including mesophiles, moderate thermophiles, and extremophiles. The key factors that impact the microorganisms are identified as temperature, oxidation-reduction potential, pH, oxygen, carbon dioxide, nutrients, energy source, anion toxicity, salinity, and process reagents. The mechanisms and pathways of bioleaching are also summarized.

Uploaded by

Daniel Cordova
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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COPPER SULFIDE

BIOLEACHING:
Process Chemistry
and Biology
Corale L. Brierley
Brierley Consultancy LLC
Objectives of presentation

 Consider microorganisms and most recent understanding


of bioleach functions and selectivity of organisms in
heap and stirred tank applications
 Examine factors affecting bioleaching & relate factors to
applications of the technology
 Discuss testwork needs and rationale
Microorganisms

 By temperature characteristics
 Mesophilic - Approx. 25-45oC (75-110oF)
 Moderately thermophilic – Approx 35-60oC (95-140oF)
 Extremely thermophilic – Approx 50-80oC (125-175oF)
 By energy source
 Iron oxidizers
 Sulfur oxidizers
 Types and numbers of microorganisms change in heap or
stirred reactors with time, temperature and chemical
conditions
Some common microorganisms

 Mesophiles
 Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans:
oxidize Fe, S
 Leptospirillum ferrooxidans:
oxidize Fe, predominate at high
redox/Fe3+ (e.g. stirred tank
reactor, very acidic heaps)
 Ferroplasma sp: archaea,
oxidize Fe, predominate at low
pH
 Moderate thermophiles
 Sulfobacillus sp
 Acidithiobacillus caldus
Some extremophiles

 Archaea (not bacteria)


 Sulfolobus acidocaldarius:
oxidize S, but not Fe
 Acidianus brierleyi:
oxidize S & Fe
 Extremophiles used in
aerated, stirred-tank
reactors for chalcopyrite
concentrate leaching &
sulfidic-refractory Au
heap leaching
Bioleaching mechanism: current
thinking
 Fe oxidation by attached
(contact) & bulk leach solution
(non-contact) microbes
 Microbes produce extracellular
polymeric substances (EPS) &
attach electrostatically to
mineral
 High concentrations of
complexed Fe3+
 EPS a “reaction space” for metal
sulfide oxidation
 Fe2+ oxidation by contact
microbes occurs on microbe
membrane
From: Atomic force micrograph from
Rohwerder et al. Appl Microbiol Biotechnol
63:239-248, 2003
Model for bioleach mechanism
Leaching pathways
Acid-nonsoluble (FeS2, MoS2) Acid soluble
(CuFeS2, ZnS)
Factors affecting
microorganisms
 Temperature  Energy source (food)
 Oxidation-reduction  Salinity
potential (redox)
 Soluble cation and anion
 pH metal/metalloid
concentrations
 Oxygen
 Process reagents
 Carbon dioxide
 Nutrients
Temperature:
generation/retention of heat
 Temperature increase result of exothermic S2- oxidation,
principally pyrite (-12,884 kJ/kg)
 Build-up of heat also dependent on reactor design
 In heaps heating dependent several factors including
height, irrigation, ambient conditions, etc.
 Stirred-tank reactors for concentrate bioleaching are water
cooled
Temperature: heaps/dumps

 In heaps/dumps
increasing temperature
results in succession of
organisms
 ~80°C noted in Cu dumps
 Highest temperature in
sulfidic-refractory Au
heap leach was 81°C
(Tempel. 2003. SME Preprint
03-067)
Temperature: secondary
copper heaps
 Temperatures below optimum for bacteria are generally
the problem
 Why don’t secondary copper heaps heat?
 S2--S concentration (as FeS2) often sufficient (1 to 2%)
 Sulfidic-refractory Au heaps with this S2—S content do heat
(Tempel. 2003. SME Preprint 03-067)

 Could redox be the reason?


Redox: dynamics in heaps

 Redox controlled by Fe3+ : Fe2+ ratio in sulfide


leaching
 Dissolution of Cu2S occurs at a very low redox
potential (~160 mV SHE)
 Dissolution of CuS occurs at lower redox potential
(~450 mV SHE) than FeS2(650-700 mV SHE)
 In heaps Fe3+ is constantly consumed by S2- minerals
 Consumption of Fe3+ can be greater than microbial
oxidation rate of Fe2+, decreasing redox potential
 Until all (available) minerals with rest potential
lower than FeS2 are consumed, redox will not
increase high enough to oxidize FeS2
Redox: “selective leaching”

 Phenomenon of redox-controlled “selective leaching”


observed in sulfidic-refractory Au pilot test heaps
 FeAsS & ZnS leaches before FeS2 (noted by As & Zn
concentrations in effluents); redox depressed until these
minerals are depleted
 Temperature increases noted after FeAsS & ZnS depleted,
when redox increases & FeS2 begins oxidizing
Redox: high Eh scenarios

 FeS2 probably oxidizes in ROM Cu dumps because all


minerals with lower rest potential depleted
 Phenomenon best observed in column studies
 Anecdotal evidence that FeS2 will oxidize in secondary
Cu heap leach, if continue leaching after Cu minerals
depleted
 Depressed redox doesn’t occur in high performance
stirred-tank reactors
 Exception is CuFeS2
Redox: bioleaching of CuFeS2

 CuFeS2 leached at very high redox potential, but surface


passivation diminishes Cu recovery
 CuFeS2 effectively leached in 615 to 645 mV (SHE) range
at 65°+
 No surface passivation
 This is basis of BioCOP, stirred-tank bioleach
technology using extreme thermophiles
 Mintek & NICICO currently pilot testing similar
technology for heap leaching CuFeS2 ore at Sarcheshmeh
pH

 Controls Fe solubility & microbial population


 pH > 2.5 enhances Fe precipitation
 Reduce availability of Fe for microbial oxidation
 Potentially reduce heap permeability, impacting air &
solution permeability
 Can potentially coat particles, impacting leachability
 Form evaporites around air distribution system
 pH <1.2
 Increases H+ concentration, stressing microbes to
reject H+
 Reduces “diversity” of microbial population (low pH
selects for Leptospirillum & Ac. thiooxidans)
 High Fe selects for Ferroplasma
O2

 All microorganisms used in bioleaching require O2 as the


electron acceptor
4 Fe2+ + O2 + 4 H+  4 Fe3+ + 2 H2O
S° + O2 + 2 H2O  4 H+ + SO42-
 O2 utilization efficiencies in heaps around 20-30%
(higher % has been reported, but may be due to
insufficient addition)
 Can do interstitial gas measurements (20% O2 by vol is
recommended)
 DO in effluent not a good measure
 O2 utilization in stirred tanks (>40%)
 DO maintained at 2 ppm
 Aeration in high temperature, stirred tanks for CuFeS2
leaching is a challenge; use compressed O2
Nutrients: what do microbes
need?
 PO43- , NH4+, trace elements (K+ & Mg2+)
 In heaps sufficient nutrients present in solution from
mineral dissolution
 (NH4)2SO4 sometimes added to achieve 2 ppm in solution
 Excessive NH4+ and PO43- enhance Fe3+ precipitation
 Nutrients added to stirred-tank bioleach plants
 Based on chemical composition of microbes & number of
cells (109 to 1010 per ml)
 Calculated back to kg N, P & K per tonne of S2-- S oxidized
CO2: essential for microbes

 Carbon required by microorganisms for synthesis of


cellular components
 Microbes obtain carbon from CO2
 CO2 not a problem in heap/dump leaching
 CO2 evolution from acid dissolution of carbonates
 CO2 addition sometimes required in stirred tanks
 Usually limestone added in stirred tanks for acid
neutralization; CO2 evolved in this reaction
 CO2 added for CuFeS2 concentrate bioleaching when pure
O2 used
Energy source: food

 Bioleaching microorganisms require Fe2+, chemically-


reduced S compound (S°, polysulfides) as source of
energy
 Don’t gain much energy from oxidation of Fe2+ to Fe3+,
so must oxidize a lot of it to obtain sufficient energy to
“fix” CO2 from the atmosphere and synthesize complex
proteins, carbohydrates, etc.
Anion toxicity

 Single-charge anions (SCN-, NO3-, Cl- and F-) most toxic


 Microbes employ an inside-positive membrane potential
to counteract inward flux of H+ and cationic metals
(reason for tolerance to high concentrations of cations)
 Anions may cross the cell membrane
 SCN- toxic - binds to key enzymes inhibiting function
 With anion accumulation, H+ enters, acidifying
cytoplasm
 Complexation chemistry in leach solution plays a big
role in what anion concentrations are toxic
 Example: complexation of F- with Al and Fe reduces F-
toxicity
Salinity: what can microbes
tolerate?
 Bioleaching organisms relatively intolerant to Cl-
 Fe2+ oxidation significantly slowed by 4 g Cl-/L; stops
above 5 g Cl-/L
 Attempts to adapt microorganisms to Cl- unsuccessful
 Toxicity is thought to be due to unfettered transport of
Cl- across the cell membrane
Process reagents

 SX reagents, greases, oils, hydraulic fluids, and dust


suppressors can be toxic
 SX reagents generally not a problem in heap/dump
leach, because adsorb to mineral surfaces at top surface
 Some decline in microbial numbers observed as pregnant
solution passes through SX circuit
 Steps taken to treat raffinate for entrained SX reagents
before recycle to stirred-tank bioleach circuit
Microbial studies in
heaps/dumps
 Few comprehensive studies in heaps/dumps on:
 Types and numbers of microorganisms
 Microbial successions/assemblages with chemical and
physical changes
 Recent study attempts to correlate temporal
microbial community in a ROM Cu test dump with
chemical & physical factors
 Demergasso and colleagues, Universidad Catolica del
Norte, Antofagasta
 Use molecular biology tools (phylogenetic analyses of
16sRNA fragments) to determine microbial assemblages
 Work will be published in next few months
Testwork for heap leaching:
bioleach considerations
 Must use microorganisms!
 Important to evaluate effect of ore on microorganisms
 Evaluate thermophiles (moderate & extreme) for sulfidic-
refractory gold & CuFeS2 bioleaching
 Using Fe2(SO4)3 or HNO3 as an analog not acceptable
 Some column testing must include closed-cycle leaching
 Evaluate the build-up of dissolved ions on microbial viability
& performance
 Evaluate S2--S oxidation for all S2- minerals not just Cu
sulfides
 Determine Total S and S2—S before & after leaching
 Establish rates of S2—S oxidation
 Process mineralogy a useful tool
Summary

 Better understanding today of temporal changes of


microbial assemblages in bioleaching with changes in
physical & chemical conditions
 By no means a complete understanding
 Contact & non-contact microbes theory
 Contact microbes have EPS with “reaction space” for Fe3+-
mediated metal sulfide oxidation
 Microbes in solution oxidize soluble Fe2+ & polysulfides
Summary

 Factors affecting bioleaching (temperature, pH, redox,


O2, CO2 nutrients, energy sources, salinity, anions,
process reagents)
 Testwork must include
 Microorganisms
 Closed cycle leaching
 Following S2- -S during leaching

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