Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
John Dreier
November, 1999
Introduction
Between 1980 and 2000, primary copper produced by acid sulfate leaching
has grown from about seven percent of world output to 20 percent. Driving the increase in leach
production has been the widespread adoption of solvent extraction and electrowinning (SX/EW), an
efficient, low-cost technology for recovering copper from leach solutions. While a few stand-alone
leaching operations have been commissioned since the early 1980s, notably, El Abra, Cerro Verde,
Quebrada Blanca, El Tesoro, and Carolina-Michilla, all in Chile, most new leaching capacity has been
installed at existing mines. Outside of the existing mines is a large, undeveloped oxide copper
resource that is technologically amenable to acid sulfate leaching. The purpose of this chapter is to
explain the geochemical principles that govern acid sulfate copper leaching and to provide a basis for
understanding the testing application of acid leaching to the undeveloped oxide copper resource
base.
The leaching of copper in commercial operations is similar in principal (virtually identical in most
respects) to natural processes including the formation of leached cappings above copper deposits,
the weathering of rocks, the generation of acid and metals by the oxidation of mine dumps (ARD),
and the formation and leaching of soils. Given its importance in so many fields, natural leaching has
received a great deal of attention from economic geologists, geochemists, soil scientists and others
for more than a century. The approach taken by this chapter is to apply to commercial copper
leaching the theories and methods used to quantitatively understand and predict the outcomes of
natural leaching.
The principal message of this chapter is that leaching kinetics and acid consumption depend on the
ore and gangue mineralogy. To summarize for copper minerals: (1) oxide, hydroxide, sulfate, and
silicate minerals leach quickly, (2) Reduced copper oxides such as delafossite and cuprite, native
copper, and copper sulfide minerals of the chalcocite series leach slower than copper oxides,
sulfates, and silicates, and (3) chalcopyrite and bornite leach very slowly. Gangue composed of
quartz, sericite and other non-reactive minerals (minerals that do not react with the leach solution)
allows fast leach kinetics and low acid consumption. Economic recovery of copper from non-reactive
gangue often requires little or no crushing or curing. By contrast, gangue composed of calcite and
other reactive minerals (minerals that dissolve rapidly in acid) is typified by low leach kinetics and
high acid consumption. A worst case example for reactive gangue is limestone. The commercial
leaching of copper from reactive gangue requires crushing and acid curing if, indeed, leaching is
feasible.
2.
Interaction of the leach solution with the ore and gangue minerals within the heap.
3.
Soichiometric exchange of one copper ion for two hydrogen ions in the SX plant.
4.
The preceding four points state that oxide copper leaching with SX/EW takes place within a system
that is closed to all elements save copper and sulfur. Sulfur is added as fresh leach solution. Copper
is removed from the system in the SX/EW plant. Sulfide dump or heap leaching, where all acid is
derived from the dissolution of pyrite and other sulfides, is closed to all elements save copper. For all
other elements and compounds, copper heap leaching is a closed system. The characterization of
copper leaching as a closed system has profound implications to the chemistry of leaching.
CuSiO3.H2O
neoticite
(Cu,Fe,Mn)SiO3.H2O
tenorite
CuO
pitch limonite
(Fe,Cu)O2
delafossite
FeCuO2
native copper
Cu
cuprite
Cu2O
atacamite
Cu2(OH)3Cl
chalcanthite
CuSO4.5H2O
antlerite
Cu3SO4.(OH) 4
brochantite
Cu4SO4.(OH)6
malachite
Cu2CO3.(OH)2
azurite
Cu3 (CO3)2.(OH)2
chalcocite
Cu2S
covellite
CuS
digenite
Cu1.95-xS
djurleite
Cu1.95-xS
bornite
Cu5FeS4
chalcopyrite
CuFeS2
The small number of important secondary copper minerals results from the following:
1.
An overall uniformity in the chemical composition of rocks that occur in porphyry copper deposits
as shown by published tables of whole rock chemistry and mineralogy for various porphyry
copper deposits (Titley, 1978,1982). The whole rock chemical data in these publications suggests
that weathering of primary copper deposits would tend to produce copper silicates, sulfates, and
carbonates in combination with iron, and manganese.
2.
The prevalence of oxygen and carbon dioxide in Earths atmosphere and hydrosphere suggests
that oxides, hydroxides, and carbonates of copper should be common.
3.
The presence of sulfur in minerals such as pyrite, chalcopyrite, and bornite in primary copper
deposits suggests that copper sulfates might be common in secondary deposits.
4.
That sulfuric acid is released during the weathering and oxidation of primary copper deposits
suggests that common secondary copper minerals might be stable in ground water of weak to
moderate acidity.
5.
The thermodynamic properties of copper minerals suggests that oxidized porphyry copper
deposits would tend to be rich in chrysocolla, tenorite, copper-manganese silicates, cuprite,
delafossite, and various members of the chalcocite series. These copper minerals are stable
relative to other secondary copper minerals because their structures permit widespread
substitution of other cations for copper.
6.
Eh-pH Diagrams
Eh-pH diagrams have been widely used for the past 50 years as a convenient and visually effective
method to evaluate the stability of copper minerals in contact with aqueous solutions, Anderson
(1982), Garrels and Christ (1965), Sato (1960), and Titley (1978). The diagrams are constructed from
thermodynamic data for minerals and aqueous solution species and employ assumed or analytical
data for dissolved aqueous species of interest. They are thoroughly explained as to construction,
thermodynamic basis, limitations, and many other aspects by Garrels and Christ (1965).
Eh-pH diagrams show the thermodynamic relationships of minerals under specified conditions of
dissolved sulfur, copper, iron, and other species, as in the following examples. In these examples,
and in others throughout the text, a species enclosed in brackets [Cu +2= activity coefficient, and m =
molality (moles of solute per kg of solution). Cu] signifies the activity of the species in the leach
solution where a = m, a = activity, 2+, Al3+, Fe3+, etc. denote the valence state of the aqueous
species dissolved in the solution.
The solubility of a mineral or other solid substance in a leach solution is the amount of the solid that
will dissolve to produce a saturated solution. K(sp) is the solubility product of a solid substance:
If the activity product of the reactants raised to the appropriate powers shown in the equilibrium
expression exceed the value of K(sp) then the mineral will tend to precipitate. In the case of copper
sulfate, if K(sp) < [Cu2+][ SO4] copper sulfate will tend to precipitate. Likewise, copper sulfate will tend to
dissolve if the activity products of the reactants raised to the appropriate powers shown in the
equilibrium expression are less than the value of the solubility product K (sp) >[Cu2+][ SO4].
The importance of pH in the dissolution and precipitation of copper minerals is apparent in the
hydrolysis of chrysocolla.
CuSiO3.H2O + 2H+ = Cu2+ + H4SiO4
K(sp) = 10 0.8 = [Cu2+][H4SiO4]/[H+]2
log K(sp) = 0.8 = log[Cu2+] + log[H4SiO4] - 2log[H+]
According to the equation for the solubility of chrysocolla:
when pH = 4 and dissolved silica = 58 ppm (0.058gms/kg sol/60gms/mole = 0.000959m)
log[Cu+2] = 0.8 - log 0.000959 - 2pH = -4.218m
If log [Cu+2] is greater than 4.218m (0.0000605m), chrysocolla will tend to precipitate. If [Cu +2] is less
than 0.0000605m, chrysocolla will tend to dissolve. The calculations suggest that groundwater
saturated in silica at pH = 4 could be an effective leaching agent. Over the thousands or millions of
years that encompass a geological process, the ground water could slowly dissolve chrysocolla and
transport the copper to some other location. By contrast, the calculations indicate that in the case of
a commercial operation, which must, of economic necessity, leach and recover copper within a few
months, chrysocolla would be stable and copper would be immobile.
If the pH of the leach solution is lowered to 2, then log[Cu 2+] increases to 1.182m (0.65 m) or 42
gms/kg. Under these low pH conditions, chrysocolla would tend to dissolve and copper would tend to
be mobile, even in commercial leaching operations.
In acid sulfate leaching, the solubility of antlerite and other copper sulfate minerals depends on the
activity of sulfate in solution as well as pH.
Cu3SO4.(OH) 4 + 4H+ = 3Cu2+ + SO4= + 4H2O
K(sp) = 10 8.29 = [Cu+2]3[SO42-]/[H+]4
log K(sp) = 8.29 = 3log[Cu2+] + log[SO4=] - 4log[H+]
log[Cu+2] = (8.29 - log[SO4-2] - 4pH)/3
at pH = 5 and log [SO4=] = -0.3 (or 0.5m), log [Cu2+] = -3.80m
2.
The content of pyrite and other sulfide minerals in the deposit prior to weathering.
3.
Chrysocolla is abundant in oxide copper deposits because it is stable relative to other copper
minerals under oxidizing- moderate pH conditions where dissolved silica is near its solubility limit.
The stability of chrysocolla relative to other secondary copper silicate minerals is enhanced by the
widespread substitution of Fe, Mn, Al and other cations into the chrysocolla structure. Conditions
favorable to chrysocolla deposition occur in many weathered porphyry copper deposits of low to
moderate sulfide content in andesite, monzonite, or granite host rocks. The oxidation of pyrite and
chalcopyrite in these deposits produces sulfuric acid sufficient to break down some silicate gangue
minerals but not enough to mobilize copper from the rock. Chrysocolla deposits form in ground water
environments where pH is in the range of 5 to 6 and [H 4SiO4] is at or near silica saturation.
Tenorite is common in oxidized copper deposits of original low sulfide contents where dissolved silica
was low. Native copper, cuprite and delafossite occur towards the bottom of oxide deposits where Eh
has been lowered through the reaction of the ground waters with gangue minerals. Delafossite, as
opposed to cuprite or native copper, is favored if dissolved ferrous iron is high. Malachite and azurite
are common where dissolved CO2 and pH are high, as in oxidized skarn and limestone hosted
copper deposits.
Antlerite, brochantite and other copper sulfate minerals occur in oxidized chalcocite blankets where
sulfate was high and pH was in the range of 3 to 5. Antlerite deposits are preserved from dissolution
by desert conditions or by an influx of neutral to basic ground water.
Atacamite is found in very arid regions where total chloride in the ground water is high. Not
surprisingly, atacamite is a common mineral in the secondary copper deposits of northern Chile, one
of the driest regions on earth.
The significance of Fig. 1 to the leaching of copper in commercial operations is that all copper
minerals, including oxides, hydroxides, sulfides, phosphates, sulfates, carbonates, and silicates, are
soluble under acid-oxidizing conditions as exist in sulfate leach solutions. In nature, the leaching of
copper deposits commonly produces leached caps that may contain as little as a 50 ppm copper
residue. This is not to say, however, that all copper minerals dissolve at the same rate or that all of
the copper in a heap or dump may be recovered during the life of a given operation; far from it.
Copper minerals do not all dissolve at the same rate and it may take a great deal of time to establish
Eh-pH conditions conducive to leaching throughout every part of a heap. Nevertheless, all of the
copper in a copper deposit is ultimately acid soluble. In view of this fact, the purpose of leach testing
is to determine if leaching is economically feasible, and, if so to optimize leach kinetics and acid
consumption.
In the Very Rapid category are copper sulfates, chlorides, and carbonates. Sulfates are soluble in
water. They dissolve very quickly releasing metals and acid. Chlorides dissolve quickly releasing
metals and chloride. Carbonates dissolve violently in sulfuric acid releasing copper and CO 2 gas.
In the Rapid category are copper silicates and oxides containing Cu 2+, Fe3+, and Mn4+. The high
measured dissolution rates of copper silicates and oxides are assisted by three additional factors:
1.
These minerals tend to have very high surface areas because they usually occur along fractures
as powdery coatings (solids tend to dissolve faster as their surface areas go up).
2.
Chrysocolla has a fibrous, highly porous structure that promotes the entry of solutions into the
mineral.
3.
The dissolution of these minerals involves breaking the relatively weak Cu-O bond (according to
Brady and Walther (1989), the solubility of silicate minerals is a function of the solubility of the
principal metal oxide and CuO is highly soluble.
In the Moderate category is native copper and reduced oxide minerals containing Cu + and Fe2+.
These minerals, like chrysocolla, commonly occur as powdery or paint-like coatings on fractures. The
reduced copper and copper-iron minerals dissolve more slowly than the previous two groups
because dissolution of reduced oxide copper minerals requires removing an electron from copper
(and from iron if present):
Cu+
Cu2+ + e-
In the Slow category are the copper sulfide minerals: chalcocite, covellite, digenite, and others of the
chalcocite series. The dissolution of chalcocite type minerals requires the oxidation of sulfur from
S= to S6+ with the removal of eight electrons. It may also involve the oxidation of copper from Cu + to
Cu2+ with the removal of an additional electron.
In the Very Slow category are chalcopyrite and bornite. The dissolution of chalcopyrite requires the
oxidation of iron from Fe2+ to Fe3+ and the oxidation of sulfur from S= to S6+(with the resultant removal
of 17 electrons) for each ion of copper released to the leach solution.
Of practical importance, the minerals of the Very Rapid and Rapid categories have dissolution rates
that permitted vat leaching (contact times of up to 48 hours). Copper minerals in the Moderate and
Slow categories are permissive of heap leaching (contact times of 30 to >300 days). Chalcopyrite
dissolves so slowly that heap leaching is not a feasible recovery method. It is frequently stated that
chalcopyrite cannot be recovered by acid sulfate leaching because it is insoluble. However,
equilibrium considerations given below shows that chalcopyrite is highly soluble in leach solutions;
the problem with chalcopyrite is not one of solubility but of dissolution kinetics.
Acid Consumption
As a leach solution flows down through a heap, it reacts with ore and gangue minerals in a great
many hydrolysis reactions (exemplified by the dissolution of chrysocolla) and redox reactions
(exemplified by the dissolution of pyrite).
Silicate gangue minerals comprise more than 99 percent of most oxide porphyry copper ores. Given
this fact, we would expect that the behavior of silicate gangue minerals in sulfuric acid solutions
would be very important to copper leaching. The most common silicate gangue minerals in porphyry
copper deposits are:
Important Gangue Minerals
quartz
SiO2
orthoclase
KAlSi3O8
plagioclase
NaAlSi3O8 CaAl2Si2O8
biotite
KFe3(AlSi3O10(OH)2
chlorite
Mg5(Al,Fe)(Al,Si)4O10(OH)8
sericite
KAl2(AlSi3O10)(OH) 2
montmorillonite
(Mg,Ca,Fe)(Al,Mg,Fe)4(SiAl)8O20(OH)4.nH2O
vermiculite
(Mg,Ca)(Al,Mg,Fe)6[(Al,Si)8O20](OH)4.8H2O
kaolinite
Al4Si4O10(OH)8
hornblende
Ca(Mg,Fe)3Si4O12
actinolite
Ca2(Mg,Fe,Al)5Si8O22(OH) 2
muscovite
K2Al4(Si6Al2O20)(OH) 2
Copper ores hosted by basalt and diabase such as Ray, Arizona or the copper deposits of the
Coast Range of Chile tend to consume a great deal of acid.
2.
Ores composed of monzonite, andesite, and granite, consume moderate amounts of acid.
3.
4.
Because porphyry copper deposits typically have a variety of rock and alteration types, they tend to
contain a number of distinct ore assemblages (Fig.. 6), each characterized by unique acid
consuming properties and leach kinetics.
Leaching Kinetics
Silicate gangue may be subdivided into five categories according to the rate at which the component
gangue minerals react with acid. At the relatively high acid consuming end of the spectrum, basaltdiabase gangue reacts quickly with leach solution. At the lower end, quartz sandstone is almost
unreactive. As gangue becomes more reactive its capacity to neutralize the leach solution increases.
Highly Reactive Gangue: Highly reactive gangue contains significant amounts of carbonate
minerals, including calcite, dolomite, and siderite. These and other carbonate minerals dissolve on
contact with the leach solution producing cations, water and CO 2 gas. One kg of calcite will consume
0.98 kg of acid so one percent of calcite in a rock will consume 9.8 kg of acid. Depending on copper
content, the presence of calcite in amounts of more than a few percent will render most oxide copper
deposits unsuitable for leaching.
Reactive Gangue Reactive gangue contains significant amounts of hornblende, pyroxene, and Ca
plagioclase ( upper part of Fig. 3 ), minerals that dissolve quickly relative to other silicate minerals
according to dissociation reactions as follows:
CaAl2Si2O8 + 8H+ = Ca2+ + 2Al3+ + 2SiO2 + 4H2O
Ca(Mg,Fe)3Si4O12 + 8H+ = Ca2+ + 3(Mg2+ + Fe2+) + 4SiO2 + 4H2O
Leach solution descending through a column of reactive gangue becomes involved in hydrolysis and
redox reactions. As these reactions consume hydrogen and ferric ions along the flow path, the leach
solution will undergo progressive and continuous change such that pH will increase and Eh will
decrease. This will cause the chemical driving force behind the dissolution of copper minerals to
diminish, which, in turn, will result in progressively slower copper leach kinetics and a decrease in the
percentage of copper recovered from each succeeding unit of depth in the column of ore (Fig..
7 and 8). Depending on the length of the flow path and the reactivity of the gangue, at some point the
Eh-pH component of the solution may leave the field of Cu 2+ and enter the field(s) of native copper,
cuprite, or delafossite. If this occurs, copper leaching will stop and copper precipitation might begin.
Moderately Reactive Gangue Moderately reactive gangue contains orthoclase, biotite, albite, and
quartz; silicate minerals that also dissolve as a result of hydrolysis reactions:
KAlSi3O8 + 4H+ = K+ + Al3+ + 3SiO2 + 2H2O
KFe3(AlSi3O10(OH)2 + 10H+ = K+ + 3Fe2+ + Al3+ + 6H2O + 3SiO2
Biotite, albite, and orthoclase dissolve more slowly than hornblende and Ca plagioclase. For this
reason, the hydrolysis reactions involving biotite, albite, and orthoclase consume fewer hydrogen and
ferric ions per unit length of solution flow path than hornblende and Ca plagioclase with the result that
at every point along the flow path, pH is lower and Eh is higher than in a column of reactive ore.
Because fewer hydrogen and ferric ions are consumed in a unit length of moderately reactive
gangue, pH remains lower and Eh higher over a greater proportion of the solution flow path through
the ore column. The end result is that moderately reactive gangue has (1) faster leach kinetics for
each segment of the flow path and (2) a reduced likelihood that Eh-pH conditions will move out of the
Cu2+ field before the leach solution exits the ore column. Thus, the net effect of leaching moderately
reactive gangue, as compared to reactive gangue, is that leaching kinetics are higher, acid
consumption is lower, and the leaching of copper is more uniform throughout the ore column.
Slightly Reactive Gangue Quartz, sericite, and/or kaolinite are in equilibrium (quartz) or near
equilibrium (sericite and kaolinite) with the leach solution. Because quartz is stable in leach solutions
and sericite and kaolinite dissolve very slowly, the leach solution undergoes only minor depletion of
hydrogen and ferric ions as it flows through the column of ore. As a result, (1) pH and Eh retain their
initial values throughout the solution flow path and (2) the chemical force driving the dissolution of
copper minerals remains high along the flow path. Thus, leaching rates for slightly reactive gangue
are substantially higher than for ores hosted by reactive and moderately reactive gangue and acid
consumption is substantially lower.
Non-reactive Gangue Quartz sandstones are sensibly unreactive to leach solutions and leaching is
accompanied by little, if any acid consumption. If these rocks are porous, copper leach kinetics are
high, acid consumption is low, and leaching is uniform through the ore column.
The relationship between acid consumption and leaching kinetics for three ore types is shown in Fig..
8.
The same principles governing the depletion of hydrogen and ferric ions in the leach solution also
apply to individual ore fragments. As shown in Fig.s. 9 and 10, leach solution flowing towards the
center of an ore particle may become depleted in hydrogen and ferric ions. If the ore fragment is
sufficiently reactive that hydrogen and ferric ions are consumed faster than they are supplied, the EhpH component of the solution may move out of the Cu2+field. The locus of all points around an ore
particle where Eh-pH conditions depart from the Cu2+ field defines a reaction rim. Outside of the
reaction rim, copper is leached from the particle; inside of the rim copper remains unleached.
Because the solubility field for iron (Fig.. 12) extends to higher pH regions than that of copper, iron
oxides may be leached from the entire ore particle while copper is leached only from the outer rim.
As might be expected, the more reactive the gangue, the narrower the reaction rim and the less
complete the leaching (Fig..11). In practice, the more reactive the gangue and the narrower the
reaction rim, the finer the ore must be crushed to maintain Eh-pH conditions conducive to copper
leaching for the bulk of the ore. Paulson and Kuhlman (1989) have reported the preservation of oxide
and native copper within individual biotite and plagioclase grains whereas copper was leached from
the matrix surrounding the grains.
Because copper leaching kinetics depends strongly on pH and Eh, laboratory leach tests must be
conducted under Eh-pH conditions that will be used in the proposed (or ongoing) operation. If the
tests employ a solution of unrealistically low pH, then copper leach kinetics and acid consumption
experienced in the test will be higher than those likely to be encountered in the operation. Conducting
leaching tests using an unrealistically high solution pH will result in inappropriately low leach kinetics
and low acid consumption. Leach tests that employ inappropriate Eh conditions may also produce
misleading data.
(n)23.06kcal/volt-gram-equiv.
(n = the number of electrons involved in the reaction)
2.
The dissolution of copper sulfides and reduced oxides such as cuprite and native copper depend
on dissolved ferric iron as the oxidizing agent.
Eh-pH relations for the iron-sulfur-water system are shown in Fig. 12.
The iron content of typical porphyry copper ore is between 2% and 6%. In unoxidized deposits, the
iron is present largely in the ferrous state in the following minerals:
1.
2.
3.
It was stated previously that the dissolution of biotite, hornblende and other iron silicate minerals (as
well as iron sulfide minerals) releases ferrous iron into the leach solution. The result of iron silicate
mineral dissolution is a lowering of the ferric/ferrous ratio. Because Eh is a function of Fe 3+/Fe2+,
lowering the ferric/ferrous ratio lowers the Eh of the leach solution. If the dissolution of iron silicate
minerals is sufficiently rapid, it may cause the Eh of the leach solution to descend into the chalcocite
field of Fig. 1. Should this take place, the leaching of copper would terminate and the precipitation of
chalcocite (or native copper, delafossite or cuprite) might take place.
In recent years, ARD, the release of acid and toxic metals from mine workings and dumps by the
oxidation and dissolution of sulfide minerals has been extensively studied (Plumlee and Logsdon,
1998). The following discussion draws heavily on the review of the geochemistry of iron summarized
by Nordstrom and Alpers (1998) published in a volume devoted to the environmental geochemistry of
mineral deposits.
The Oxidation of Sulfide Minerals
Sulfide minerals oxidize by means of three general mechanisms: (1) the direct application of oxygen,
(2) by ferric ions, and (3) the action of microbes.
Oxidation of pyrite by the direct action of oxygen proceeds by the overall reaction:
FeS2 + 15/4 O2 + 7/2H2O
Laboratory rates for this reaction range from 1.1 x 10 -10 to 5.3 x 10-10 moles per square meter per
second.
The dissolution of pyrite minerals by the action of dissolved ferric iron has been shown to occur
according to the balanced reaction:
FeS2 + 14Fe3+ + 8H2O
Rates for the dissolution of pyrite by ferric iron in the laboratory range from
9.6 x 10-9 to 1.8 x 10-8 moles per square meter per second. In this reaction, oxygen is required to
oxidize the ferrous iron to ferric.
While the specific mechanisms operating at the surface of a dissolving sulfide grain are still debated,
various laboratory experiments show that ferric iron dissolves sulfides 100 to 1000 times faster than
oxygen. In heap leaching, the oxidation of iron by the direct action of oxygen is limited by the low
solubility of oxygen in water at 25 degrees C (8.11 mg/liter or 5 x 10 -4m) and the difficulty in
replenishing oxygen to the leach solution in the deeper parts of heaps and dumps.
The participation of microbes in the oxidation of sulfides has been known or suspected for more than
a century and has been intensively investigated for the past 40 years or so. Research has shown that
microbial action enhances the oxidation of sulfides by catalyzing the ferrous to ferric transition.
Although the site of the microbial mediation of ferrous to ferric oxidation has not been established,
evidence suggests that much of it occurs in the solution (as opposed to the surface of the pyrite).
Laboratory measurements indicate that the microbial mediated oxidation of ferrous iron occurs at
rates of 5 x 10-7 to 8.8 x 10-8moles per square meter per second, or about 10 times faster than by
abiotic oxidation of ferric iron (see table 6.5 of Nordstrom and Alpers (1998)).
The quantity of iron that may be held in a leach solution and the ferric/ferrous ratio of the leach
solution are largely determined by of the solubility of jarosite:
KFe3 (SO4)2(OH)6 + 6H+
If ferric iron is consumed in the dissolution of biotite or sulfides, jarosite will tend to dissolve and
release ferric iron into solution.
2.
If [Fe3+] increases, jarosite will precipitate and Fe3+/ Fe2+ will decrease.
3.
If solution pH increases, jarosite will precipitate releasing H+ (lowering pH) but consuming
Fe3+ (lowering Eh).
In fact, data from column leach tests show that Eh pH conditions for leach solutions do tend to
stabilize along the ferrous sulfate (aqueous) jarosite phase boundary (Fig. 12) in general
agreement with the preceding discussion.
If solution pH increases above 2.5 to 3, or if total dissolve sulfur decreases beyond a certain level,
then the geochemistry will be controlled by the precipitation and dissolution of various FeO(OH)
compounds including goethite and ferrihydrite.
FeO(OH) (solid) + 3H+
3Fe3+ + 2 H2O
If the ore is composed of unreactive gangue minerals but has a high pyrite content, the oxidation of
the pyrite may produce a very low pH leach solution. Given sufficient time, pH may trend down below
1.5 or 1 (into the ferric sulfate field of Fig. 12), and total dissolved iron may become very high. In
most ores, however, acid consuming silicate minerals result in Eh-pH conditions within the jarosite
field of Fig. 12.
Acid Curing
In the 1920s and 1930s the U. S. Bureau of mines conducted leach tests at the Tucson, Arizona
research center to develop an economic method to recover copper from low-grade oxide copper
ores. The low copper values of the ores dictated an approach involving minimal handling. Experience
with dump leaching pointed to piling the oxide ore in heaps and applying an acid solution to the top.
In testing this general approach, it was found that leaching rates were low and acid consumption was
high. Further work by the Bureau of Mines and by Inspiration Consolidated Copper Company in the
1970s showed that leach kinetics and acid consumption could be considerably improved by applying
a strong acid solution to the ore at the beginning of the leach cycle. Inspiration further improved
performance by adding ferric iron to the initial acid solution. The initial acid dosage was termed a
cure.
The geochemistry of acid curing is best understood by further examination of Fig. 1. The initial Eh-pH
conditions of the leach solution prior to its application to the top of the heap are within the Cu 2+ field
while, for the ore, they are similar to the Eh-pH conditions of ground water in the mine area (in the
southwest U. S. A. Eh is about 0 and pH is about 8). If the ore contains Reactive or Moderately
Reactive gangue, leaching will quickly lower Eh and increase pH. If the rate of solution-mineral
reaction is faster than the rate of acid addition, depletion of hydrogen and ferric ions will move the
composition of the leach out of the Cu+2field and into the fields of chrysocolla, native copper, or
chalcocite.
At the point shown for Arizona ground water on Fig. 1 the solubility of copper is well below 10 -6m. The
rapid neutralization of the leach solution caused by the dissolution of gangue that is roughly in
equilibrium with Arizona ground water chemistry will result in the formation of an acid front within the
ore column (Fig. 13). Behind (above) the acid front, Eh and pH are within the Cu 2+ field of Fig. 1 and
copper is leached. Across the acid front Eh drops from 0.6 0.5 to 0.1 0 and the solubility of
copper drops from 0.1m (6 gms/l) to 10-6m, a decline of about 5 orders of magnitude. Below the acid
front, the solubility of copper is very low, (perhaps 10 -7m). If the acid front develops well up in the ore
column, the very low solubility of copper in the neutralized solution may lead to the precipitation of
copper within the column of ore. Common copper precipitates within columns and heaps include
native copper, delafossite, and chalcocite. If the acid front develops near the bottom of the column,
copper leaching may terminate but there might be insufficient time for copper precipitation to occur.
In any case, the results of many years of testing that included Eh-pH measurements of the leach
solution indicate that the function of the cure is to establish high Eh low pH conditions throughout the
entire ore column at the beginning of the leach cycle.
Chemistry of the Leach Solution
The chemical composition of leach solutions results from (1) the action of a lixiviant on the ore and
gangue minerals, (2) the exchange of copper for hydrogen ions in the SX/EW plant, and (3) the
precipitation of new minerals from the leach solution. Considering these factors it is evident that the
chemistry of the leach solution depends on the following:
1.
2.
The speciation of Cu, Fe, Mg, S, Na, and other solutes in the solution,
3.
4.
5.
6.
The rate of addition of now ore (of each compositional type) to the heap.
Because points (1) and (5), and, obliquely, (5) and (6) were discussed previously and the chemistry
of the SX/EW plant is treated elsewhere in the course, this section focuses on (2) the speciation of
the leach solution and its related topic, (3) mineral precipitation.
Speciation of the Leach Solution Leach solutions are typically complex solutions, containing Cu,
Zn, Fe, Al, Na, K, Ca, Mg, Mn, Si, C, P, S, Cl, H, PO4 and other constituents. The behavior of the
solution depends on the relative and absolute amounts of these constituents present, and on the
ways in which these constituents combine (their speciation) in the leach solution.
Analyses of leach solutions indicate bulk solution compositions generally similar to the following
table:
Element
Composition (gms/liter)
Cu
0.5 15
Zn
0.05 0.3
Fe
0.5 10
Al
1.0 8
Na
0.01 0.04
0.02 0.06
Ca
0.04 0.07
Mg
1.0 4.0
Mn
0.01 1.0
Si
0.01 0.3
0.0
0.1 0.5
10 20
C1
1 10
Experimental work shows that copper may occur in aqueous solutions as: Cu +, Cu2+, CuSO4,
Cu(OH)2, Cu(OH)31-, Cu(OH)42-, CuCl, and CuCl2 , while iron may occur as Fe2+, Fe3+, FeHPO4+,
FeSO4, FeHSO4+, FeHPO4, FeOH+, Fe(HS)2, Fe(HS)3-, FeHPO42+, FeSO4+, FeHSO42-, FeOH2+,
FeHPO4+, Fe(OH)3, Fe2(OH)2, Fe(OH)4-, Fe3(OH)45+. The other dissolved solids also occur in a
multiplicity of aqueous species. Because leach solutions may potentially consist of hundreds or
thousands of solution species it is necessary to perform equilibrium calculations to determine the
degree to which each species is present in solution and how adjustments might occur should certain
key solution parameters (such as Eh or pH) change. This exercise requires that equations for all
potential solutions be written as shown below and then solved simultaneously.
Fe2+ = Fe3+: K(react) = [Fe3+]/[Fe2+]
Fe+3 + 3H2O = Fe(OH)3 + 3H+: K(react) = [Fe(OH)3][H+]3/[Fe3+]
Fe+2 + SO4= = FeSO4 K(react) = [FeSO4]/[Fe+2][SO4=]
In view of the large number of possible solution species, a computer is required to solve the
equations. The example included with this chapter was solved using WATEQ, Ball and Nordstrom,
(1991). An overview of the example solved is as follows:
Element
Cu
Cu , Cu SO4
Zn
Zn2+, Zn SO4
Fe
Al
AlSO4+
Na
Na+
K+
Ca
Ca2+, Ca SO4
Mg
Mg2+, MgSO4
Mn
Mn2+, MnSO4
Si
H4 SiO4
FeH2PO42+
AlSO4+, MgSO4
The example solution species distribution and the above table indicate the strong predilection for
iron, copper, manganese, magnesium, calcium, and zinc to complex with sulfate in leach solutions.
Indeed, copper heap leaching is only possible because copper (and iron) forms a strong aqueous
sulfate complex. Species distribution calculations using other values for pH will differ from the above
example because the stability of solution species is strongly dependent on:
1.
pH
Eh:
occurs at the beginning of leaching and for some time thereafter as the dissolution of ore and gangue
minerals releases solutes to the leach solution but, before the solubility limits of mineral salts are
reached. As TDS reaches the solubility limits of silica, gypsum, jarosite, clays and other solids the
second and longest phase of leaching begins. The second phase of leaching takes place when the
solubility products of first one, and then all new solids are exceeded and mineral precipitation begins
( Fig. 14 ). The example solution speciation calculation referred to above and included with this
chapter contains a section on a number of potential solid precipitates. The tendency for solids to
precipitate from the leach solution depends on the solubility constant of the solid phase and the
activities of its component species in the leach solution :
H2O + SiO2 = H4 SiO4 K(sp = [H4 SiO4] = 10-2.7
[SiO2] = 120 ppm
KFe3(SO4)2(OH)6 + 6H+ = K+ + 3Fe3+ + 2(SO4)= + 6H2O
K(sp) = [K+][Fe3+] 3[SO4=] 2/[H+]6 = 10-14.8
CaSO4.2H2O = Ca2+ + SO4= + 2H2O
K(sp) = [Ca2+][SO4=2] = 10-4.58
In the example solution where log [SO4-2] = -2.342, log [Ca+2 ] should stabilize at 2.238 or 231 ppm.
As shown in the attached solution speciation example, copper leaching results in the precipitation of
many new minerals. In addition to silica, jarosite, and gypsum, predicted precipitates include various
sulfates and hydroxides of iron, aluminum, magnesium, and manganese. The concentrations of K,
SO4, Fe3+, Fe2+, (and possibly sodium and potassium) are controlled mostly by the solubility of
jarosite. Over the life of a leaching operation, tens or hundreds of thousands of tonnes of such
minerals will precipitate from the leach solution within the heap. Within rock fragments, the
concentrations of aluminum, silica, and potassium in solution may be fixed by the solubility of
pyrophyllite (Al2Si4O10(OH)2), kaolinite, and illite (KAl4 Si7O20(OH)8). The relationship of pyrophyllite
and kaolinite to orthoclase in terms of dissolved silica and the ratio: log [K +]/[H+] (solution) is shown
on Fig. 15 where it can be seen that a decrease in [K+]/[H+] will promote the dissolution of orthoclase
and the precipitation of kaoilnite. A further decrease in [K+]/[H+] may lead to the dissolution of kaolinite
and the precipitation of pyrophyllite. In respect of theFig. 10, leach solutions might be expected to
dissolve orthoclase and precipitate kaolinite or pyrophyllite but this has not been reported in the
literature. From the preceding discussion it should be obvious that to predict or understand acid
consumption, mineral precipitation, and most other aspects of leaching periodic total chemical
analyses of the leach solution must be made.
Copper Leaching: A Geochemical Cycle
In column testing it is generally found that open cycle copper leaching leads to higher acid
consumption than locked cycle leaching ( Fig. 17 ). While this might seem contrary to expectations,
examination of mineral hydrolysis reactions shows that copper leaching involves not only acid
consuming reactions but also, acid producing reactions. While the idea of acid consuming reactions
in copper leaching is readily understood because non sulfide leaching operations must buy acid to
replace that which is consumed, it is less well known that acid producing reactions also take place
during leaching. (By this I am not referring to acid produced by the oxidation of pyrite during leaching
or the acid generated in the SX plant by the exchange of hydrogen ions for copper). In copper
leaching, acid is generated whenever a mineral having an (OH) in its formula - an example would be
FeO(OH) - precipitates from the leach solution. Removing (OH) from water (H 2O) leaves H+. In effect,
the precipitation of a compound or mineral having (OH) in its formula is the reverse of hydrolysis
because it generates acid. The mechanism for acid generation by reverse hydrolysis is illustrated in
the following reactions:
K+ + 3Fe3+ + 2(SO4)-2 + 6H2O
Fe3+ + 2H2O
KFe3(SO4)2(OH)6 + 6H+.
FeO(OH) + 3H+
Al2Si2O5(OH)4 + 6H+
These reactions show that the precipitation of minerals which contain (OH) such as jarosite, goethite,
hematite, alunite, and kaolinite releases hydrogen ions to the solution (in effect the precipitated
mineral strips one or more (OH) groups from H2O leaving H+ in the solution). A quantitative evaluation
of the acid generating capacity of reactions of this type shows that the precipitation of 1 kg of
ferrihydrite generates 1.65 kg of sulfuric acid and the precipitation of 1 kg of jarosite, 586gms of
sulfuric acid.
The fact that locked cycle leaching consumes less acid than open cycle leaching results in part from
the nature of precipitation reactions. Precipitation requires the formation of a stable solid reaction
product. Under equilibrium and near equilibrium conditions, chemical reactions are dynamic
processes involving the simultaneous formation and destruction of products and reactants. Thus, the
nucleation of solid precipitates under equilibrium conditions is often found to be difficult and time
consuming. Indeed, the formation of many precipitates requires super saturation or the presence of a
catalyst. In open cycle leaching where the solution flows through the ore column and is then
discarded, super saturation of reaction products may not occur and there may be insufficient time for
the nucleation of solid reaction products.
Also, the rate of dissolution of ore and gangue minerals is not constant in time. Rather, the more
easily dissolved minerals, including those in the fine ore fraction and those with fast dissolution
kinetics such as carbonates, dissolve early in the leaching process, while the less reactive minerals
and those blinded from the leach solution dissolve more slowly. As a result, the rate at which solutes
are added to the solution decreases with time (if no new ore is added to the column). In open cycle
leaching this leads to a steady decline in TDS over time. When TDS falls below the solubility
products of hydroxide (OH) type minerals, mineral precipitation comes to an end and the acid
generating side of leaching is terminated.
The geochemical cycle of copper leaching also has implications on the environmental side of
leaching. Normally, the closure of an operation requires rinsing a heap until effluent pH is above 6
and all solution parameters are below predetermined analytical limits set by the closure permit.
Unfortunately, as rinse water is run through a heap and the pH of the effluent solution increases,
jarosite, ferrihydrite and other hydroxol containing minerals precipitate and release acid. The amount
of acid that could be generated in this process is apparent in the following example.
Consider a 200 MMt tonne heap saturated to11% moisture by a leach solution containing 4 gms/l
iron, and 4 gms/l aluminum. The leach solution in the heap will contain 88,000 tons of Fe and 88,000
tons of Al. Precipitation of the iron as jarosite will produce 154,000 tons of sulfuric acid and the
precipitation of the aluminum will produce 319,407 tons of acid. Added to the acid produced by the
precipitation of iron and aluminum, would be a much greater amount of acid produced by the
precipitation of (OH) minerals of Na, Mg, and Mn. All together, hydroxol mineral precipitation might
easily produce 1,000,000 tons of acid.
Free Acid Determination Metallurgical tests employed to estimate the leaching behavior of copper
ores attempt to measure acid consumption. In bottle roll and open cycle tests acid consumption is
measured by subtracting the amount of acid remaining at the end of the test from the amount added
at the beginning. While the procedure sounds simple, it turns out, for practical and theoretical
reasons, to be quite difficult. Acidity is defined as the activity of the hydrogen ion in solution and is
measured as pH. However, because leach solutions contain high total TDS and are highly buffered,
pH understates the capacity of the solution to donate hydrogen ions. Most acid determination tests
employed today seek to measure free acid which is supposedly the quantity of sulfuric acid in the
solution neglecting the amount of acid contained in the metal-salt buffers such as jarosite. Various
techniques have been devised to measure free acid. Most involve removing cations and then
titrating for sulfuric acid with a strong base (Booman and others, 1958, Solomans, 1980), although,
the Grans Plot method, Orion Research (1970) employs dilution. Application of the various methods
in common use to synthetic solutions give inconsistent results that diverge from the actual amount of
sulfuric acid added to the solution as the concentration of acid and TDS increase ( Fig. 16 ).
Conceptually, an acid determination method should measure the capacity of the leach solution to
donate hydrogen ions in exchange for cations within the pH range of the leaching process. Whatever
method is used to determine acid consumption, it must take into account the buffering capacity of
metal salts such as jarosite, alunite and clay minerals.
2.
3.
4.