Gold cyanidation

Gold cyanidation (also known as the cyanide process or the MacArthur–Forrest process) is a hydrometallurgical technique for extracting gold from low-grade ore by converting the gold to a water-soluble coordination complex. It is the most commonly used leaching process for gold extraction.[1] Cyanidation is also widely used in the extraction of silver, usually after froth flotation.[2]

Production of reagents for mineral processing to recover gold represents more than 70% of cyanide consumption globally. Other metals are recovered from the process include copper, zinc, and silver, but gold is the main driver of this technology.[1] Due to the highly poisonous nature of cyanide, the process is controversial and its use is even banned in some parts of the world. Cyanide can be safely used in the gold mining industry.[3] A key feature for safe use of cyanide is to ensure adequate pH control at an alkaline pH level above 10.5. At industrial scale, pH control is mainly achieved using lime, as an important enabling reagent in gold processing.[4]

History

In 1783, Carl Wilhelm Scheele discovered that gold dissolved in aqueous solutions of cyanide. Through the work of Bagration (1844), Elsner (1846), and Faraday (1847), it was determined that each atom of gold required two cyanide ions, i.e. the stoichiometry of the soluble compound.

Industrial process

John Stewart MacArthur developed the cyanide process for gold extraction in 1887.

The expansion of gold mining in the Rand of South Africa began to slow down in the 1880s, as the new deposits being found tended to contain pyritic ore. The gold could not be extracted from this compound with any of the then available chemical processes or technologies.[5] In 1887, John Stewart MacArthur, working in collaboration with brothers Robert and William Forrest for the Tennant Company in Glasgow, Scotland, developed the MacArthur–Forrest process for the extraction of gold from gold ores. Several patents were issued in the same year.[6] By suspending the crushed ore in a cyanide solution, a separation of up to 96 percent pure gold was achieved.[7] The process was first used on the Rand in 1890 and, despite operational imperfections, led to a boom of investment as larger gold mines were opened up.[8][5]

By 1891, Nebraska pharmacist Gilbert S. Peyton had refined the process at his Mercur Mine in Utah, "the first mining plant in the United States to make a commercial success of the cyanide process on gold ores."[9][10] In 1896, Bodländer confirmed that oxygen was necessary for the process, something that had been doubted by MacArthur, and discovered that hydrogen peroxide was formed as an intermediate.[8] Around 1900, the American metallurgist Charles Washington Merrill (1869–1956) and his engineer Thomas Bennett Crowe improved the treatment of the cyanide leachate, by using vacuum and zinc dust. Their process is the Merrill–Crowe process.[11]

Chemical reactions

Ball-and-stick model of the aurocyanide or dicyanoaurate(I) complex anion, [Au(CN)2][12]
Cyanide leaching "heap" at a gold mining operation near Elko, Nevada

The chemical reaction for the dissolution of gold, the "Elsner equation", follows:

4 Au + 8 NaCN + O2 + 2 H2O → 4 Na[Au(CN)2] + 4 NaOH

Potassium cyanide and calcium cyanide are sometimes used in place of sodium cyanide.

Gold is one of the few metals that dissolves in the presence of cyanide ions and oxygen. The soluble gold species is dicyanoaurate.[13] from which it can be recovered by adsorption onto activated carbon.[14]

Application

The ore is comminuted using grinding machinery. Depending on the ore, it is sometimes further concentrated by froth flotation or by centrifugal (gravity) concentration. Water is added to produce a slurry or pulp. The basic ore slurry can be combined with a solution of sodium cyanide or potassium cyanide; many operations use calcium cyanide, which is more cost effective.

To prevent the creation of toxic hydrogen cyanide during processing, slaked lime (calcium hydroxide) or soda (sodium hydroxide) is added to the extracting solution to ensure that the acidity during cyanidation is maintained over pH 10.5 - strongly basic. Lead nitrate can improve gold leaching speed and quantity recovered, particularly in processing partially oxidized ores.

Effect of dissolved oxygen

Oxygen is one of the reagents consumed during cyanidation, accepting the electrons from the gold, and a deficiency in dissolved oxygen slows leaching rate. Air or pure oxygen gas can be purged through the pulp to maximize the dissolved oxygen concentration. Intimate oxygen-pulp contactors are used to increase the partial pressure of the oxygen in contact with the solution, thus raising the dissolved oxygen concentration much higher than the saturation level at atmospheric pressure. Oxygen can also be added by dosing the pulp with hydrogen peroxide solution.

Pre-aeration and ore washing

In some ores, particularly those that are partially sulfidized, aeration (prior to the introduction of cyanide) of the ore in water at high pH can render elements such as iron and sulfur less reactive to cyanide, therefore making the gold cyanidation process more efficient. Specifically, the oxidation of iron to iron (III) oxide and subsequent precipitation as iron hydroxide minimizes loss of cyanide from the formation of ferrous cyanide complexes. The oxidation of sulfur compounds to sulfate ions avoids the consumption of cyanide to thiocyanate (SCN) byproduct.

Recovery of gold from cyanide solutions

In order of decreasing economic efficiency, the common processes for recovery of the solubilized gold from solution are (certain processes may be precluded from use by technical factors):

Cyanide remediation processes

The cyanide remaining in tails streams from gold plants is potentially hazardous. Therefore, some operations process the cyanide-containing waste streams in a detoxification step. This step lowers the concentrations of these cyanide compounds. The INCO-licensed process and the Caro's acid process oxidise the cyanide to cyanate, which is not as toxic as the cyanide ion, and which can then react to form carbonates and ammonia: [15]

CN
+ [O] → OCN
OCN
+ 2 H
2
O
HCO
3
+ NH
3

The Inco process can typically lower cyanide concentrations to below 50 mg/L, whereas the Caro's acid process can lower cyanide levels to between 10 and 50 mg/L, with the lower concentrations achievable in solution streams rather than slurries. Caro's acid – peroxomonosulfuric acid (H2SO5) - converts cyanide to cyanate. Cyanate then hydrolyses to ammonium and carbonate ions. The Caro's acid process is able to achieve discharge levels of WAD below 50 mg/L, which is generally suitable for discharge to tailings. Hydrogen peroxide and basic chlorination can also be used to oxidize cyanide, although these approaches are less common. Typically, this process blows compressed air through the tailings while adding sodium metabisulfite, which releases SO2. Lime is used to maintain the pH at around 8.5, and copper sulfate is added as a catalyst if there is insufficient copper in the ore extract. This procedure can reduce concentrations of "Weak Acid Dissociable" (WAD) cyanide to below the 10 ppm mandated by the EU's Mining Waste Directive. This level compares to the 66-81 ppm free cyanide and 500-1000 ppm total cyanide in the pond at Baia Mare.[16] Remaining free cyanide degrades in the pond, while cyanate ions hydrolyse to ammonium. Studies show that residual cyanide trapped in the gold-mine tailings causes persistent release of toxic metals (e.g. mercury ) into the groundwater and surface water systems.[17][18]

Effects on the environment

Sodium cyanide drum at the abandoned Chemung Mine in Masonic, California

Despite being used in 90% of gold production:[19] gold cyanidation is controversial due to the toxic nature of cyanide. Although aqueous solutions of cyanide degrade rapidly in sunlight, the less toxic products, such as cyanates and thiocyanates, may persist for some years. The famous disasters have killed few people — humans can be warned not to drink or go near polluted water, but cyanide spills can have a devastating effect on rivers, sometimes killing everything for several miles downstream. The cyanide is soon washed out of river systems and, as long as organisms can migrate from unpolluted areas upstream, affected areas can soon be repopulated. According to Romanian authorities, in the Someș river below Baia Mare, the plankton returned to 60% of normal within 16 days of the spill; the numbers were not confirmed by Hungary or Yugoslavia.[16] Famous cyanide spills include:

Year Mine Country Incident
1985–1991 Summitville US Leakage from leach pad
1980s–present Ok Tedi Papua New Guinea Unrestrained waste discharge
1995 Omai Guyana Collapse of tailings dam
1998 Kumtor Kyrgyzstan Truck drove over bridge
2000 Baia Mare Romania Collapse of containment dam (see 2000 Baia Mare cyanide spill)
2000 Tolukuma Papua New Guinea Helicopter dropped crate into rainforest[20]
2018 San Dimas Mexico Truck leaked 200 liters of cyanide solution into the Piaxtla River in Durango[21]

Such spills have prompted fierce protests at new mines that involve use of cyanide, such as Roşia Montană in Romania, Lake Cowal in Australia, Pascua Lama in Chile, and Bukit Koman in Malaysia.

Alternatives to cyanide

Although cyanide is cheap, effective, and biodegradable, its high toxicity has incentivized to alternative methods for extracting gold. Other extractants have been examined including thiosulfate (S2O32−), thiourea (SC(NH2)2), iodine/iodide, ammonia, liquid mercury, and alpha-cyclodextrin. Challenges include reagent cost and the efficiency of gold recovery. Thiourea has been implemented commercially for ores containing stibnite.[22] Yet another alternative to cyanidation is the family of glycine-based lixiviants.[23]

Legislation

The US states of Montana[24] and Wisconsin,[25] the Czech Republic,[26] Hungary,[27] have banned cyanide mining. The European Commission rejected a proposal for such a ban, noting that existing regulations (see below) provide adequate environmental and health protection.[28] Several attempts to ban gold cyanidation in Romania were rejected by the Romanian Parliament. There are currently protests in Romania calling for a ban on the use of cyanide in mining (see 2013 Romanian protests against the Roșia Montană Project).

In the EU, industrial use of hazardous chemicals is controlled by the so-called Seveso II Directive (Directive 96/82/EC,[29] which replaced the original Seveso Directive (82/501/EEC[30] brought in after the 1976 dioxin disaster. "Free cyanide and any compound capable of releasing free cyanide in solution" are further controlled by being on List I of the Groundwater Directive (Directive 80/68/EEC)[31] which bans any discharge of a size which might cause deterioration in the quality of the groundwater at the time or in the future. The Groundwater Directive was largely replaced in 2000 by the Water Framework Directive (2000/60/EC).[32]

In response to the 2000 Baia Mare cyanide spill, the European Parliament and the Council adopted Directive 2006/21/EC on the management of waste from extractive industries.[33] Article 13(6) requires "the concentration of weak acid dissociable cyanide in the pond is reduced to the lowest possible level using best available techniques", and at most all mines started after 1 May 2008 may not discharge waste containing over 10ppm WAD cyanide, mines built or permitted before that date are allowed no more than 50ppm initially, dropping to 25ppm in 2013 and 10ppm by 2018.

Under Article 14, companies must also put in place financial guarantees to ensure clean-up after the mine has finished. This in particular may affect smaller companies wanting to build gold mines in the EU, as they are less likely to have the financial strength to give these kinds of guarantees.

The industry has come up with a voluntary "Cyanide Code"[34] that aims to reduce environmental impacts with third party audits of a company's cyanide management.

References

  1. Rubo, Andreas; Kellens, Raf; Reddy, Jay; Steier, Norbert; Hasenpusch, Wolfgang (2006). "Alkali Metal Cyanides". Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry. Weinheim: Wiley-VCH. doi:10.1002/14356007.i01_i01.
  2. Etris, S. F. (2010). "Silver and Silver Alloys". Kirk-Othmer Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology. doi:10.1002/0471238961.1909122205201809.a01.pub3. ISBN 978-0471238966.
  3. https://www.industry.gov.au/sites/default/files/2019-04/lpsdp-cyanide-management-handbook-english.pdf
  4. Du Plessis, C. A.; Lambert, H.; Gärtner, R. S.; Ingram, K.; Slabbert, W.; Eksteen, J. J. (2021). "Lime use in gold processing – A review". Minerals Engineering. 174: 107231. Bibcode:2021MiEng.17407231D. doi:10.1016/j.mineng.2021.107231. S2CID 240128866.
  5. Gray, J. A.; McLachlen, J. (Jun 1933). "A history of the introduction of the MacArthur-Forrest cyanide process to the Witwatersrand goldfields". Journal of the Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy. 33 (12): 375–397. hdl:10520/AJA0038223X_5033.
  6. US 403202, MacArthur, John Stewart; Forrest, William & Forrest Robert, Robert, "Process of Obtaining Gold and Silver from Ores", published 1889-05-14
  7. "Methods to recover Gold II". 2013-05-14.
  8. Habashi, Fathi Recent Advances in Gold Metallurgy Archived 2008-03-30 at the Wayback Machine
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  15. Teixeira, Luiz Alberto Cesar; Montalvo, Javier Paul; Yokoyama, Andia, Lídia; da Fonseca Araújo, Fabiana Valéria; Sarmiento, Cristian Marquez (2013). "Oxidation of cyanide in effluents by Caro's Acid". Minerals Engineering. 45: 81–87. Bibcode:2013MiEng..45...81T. doi:10.1016/j.mineng.2013.01.008. Retrieved 2 May 2021.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
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  27. Zöld siker: törvényi tilalom a cianidos bányászatra! Archived July 21, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  28. International Mining - European Commission rejects proposed ban on using cyanide in extractivism|extractive industry, July, 2010
  29. Council Directive 96/82/EC of 9 December 1996 on the control of major-accident hazards involving dangerous substances. For the modifications see the consolidated version.
  30. Council Directive 82/501/EEC of 24 June 1982 on the major-accident hazards of certain industrial activities. Not in force.
  31. Council Directive 80/68/EEC of 17 December 1979 on the protection of groundwater against pollution caused by certain dangerous substances. Not in force.
  32. Directive 2000/60/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 23 October 2000 establishing a framework for Community action in the field of water policy (the Water Framework Directive). For the modifications see the consolidated version.
  33. Directive 2006/21/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 15 March 2006 on the management of waste from extractive industries. For the modifications see the consolidated version.
  34. ICMI www.cyanidecode.org International Cyanide Management Code For The Manufacture, Transport and Use of Cyanide In The Production of Gold
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