3.8 Article

Refractory gold ores and concentrates part 2: gold mineralisation and deportment in flotation concentrates and bio-oxidised products

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/25726641.2019.1626660

Keywords

Refractory preg-robbing gold ores; visible and invisible gold grains; refractory secondary sulphate minerals; jarosite formation and surface passivation; process control and automation; flotation; bio-oxidation; gold mineralisation; gold deportment

Funding

  1. Research Training Program of the Australian Government

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The study investigated the gold mineralisation and deportment in two refractory flotation concentrates and their corresponding bio-oxidised products using several analytical techniques. The results showed the presence of visible, polydispersed, and invisible gold particles, with invisible gold disseminated in arsenian pyrite and arsenopyrite mineral phases. The complex associations of visible gold particles with sulphides, silicates, and oxides were also observed, along with noticeable gold-sulphate mineral associations in the bio-oxidised products. Additionally, differences in gold mineralisation and association, such as the occurrence of gold in muscovite and jarosite-cemented gangue mineral agglomerates, were notable between the two bio-oxidised products.
Gold mineralisation and deportment in two refractory flotation concentrates and their corresponding bio-oxidised products were investigated using several analytical techniques. One concentrate and its product show higher gold grades (28 and 38 g/t, respectively) than the other (17 and 23 g/t, respectively). The results showed that both visible, polydispersed and invisible gold particles were present in all four samples. The invisible gold was disseminated in arsenian pyrite and arsenopyrite mineral phases. Unliberated, visible gold particles were in complex gold associations with sulphides, silicates, and oxides. In addition, visible gold-sulphate mineral associations were also noticeable in the bio-oxidised products. Marked differences in gold mineralisation and association such as occurrence of gold in muscovite and jarosite-cemented gangue mineral agglomerates were notable between the two bio-oxidised products. Furthermore, combined jarosite and gypsum mineral encapsulation accounted for approximate to 43 wt.% Gold refractoriness in the lower gold-bearing bio-oxidised product.

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