A heap leach pile for extracting gold with cyanide in Elko, Nevada Photo by USGS |
How do you like that one of my relatives invented the
MacArthur-Forrest process for recovering gold in the process that is more
commonly known as the cyanide process.
This is one of the many techniques used to recover gold from low grade
ore that works by dissolving gold and other metals is a solution of water and
cyanide that causes gold to become water soluble. Chemically this is called a water soluble
coordination complex that is the most commonly used technique to recover gold.
Fifteen percent of the cyanide produced is used for gold
recovery the balance is used in other industrial processes for such things as
adhesives, plastics and insecticides.
Although both sodium and potassium cyanide are used the most commonly
used is calcium cyanide. Because of its
extreme toxicity cyanide has been outlawed in many countries, but efforts are
being made to replace its use in mining by less toxic chemicals. One of these is sodium ferricynide that has
been used under the name “hypo” in photography to dissolve silver in
photographic materials. Hypo also
dissolves gold, but not as rapidly as cyanide.
Gold mining uses cyanide for both the MacArthur-Forrest
Process for which it was originally developed and for the later heap leaching process
that was developed for recovering gold from disseminated ore like that found in
the Carlin Trend in Nevada . In the MacArthur process the gold ore is
first ground into a powder in a ball mill, a large tumbling barrel where the
grinding action is provided by large steel balls. The ore is then transferred to a vat where it
is mixed with cyanide solution and agitated with compressed air.
The other place where cyanide is used is the Heap Leach Process here the ore is ground to ¼ minus and heaped up in huge piles usually
covering several acres. A solution of
cyanide is sprinkled onto the pile with sprinklers where it seeps down through
the heap dissolving the gold in the process.
This process goes on for a considerable time with the cyanide solution
being recirculated several times until all the gold is dissolved.
In both processes the gold is precipitated from the pregnant
solution with powdered zinc although in some cases it is recovered using
activated charcoal filters. The powder
is black because it contains more then gold that is cast into a Dore bar and
sent on for further refining to remove the impurities.
Interesting and informative as usual, John!
ReplyDeleteHi There,
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing the knowledgeable blog with us I hope that you will post many more blog with us:-
Sodium cyanide is a poisonous compound with the formula NaCN. It is a white, water-soluble solid. Cyanide has a high affinity for metals.
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