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ABSTRACT This article reviews agglomeration practices for precious metal and copper heap leaching. Both industries prefer drum to conveyor agglomeration, particularly for clayey ore or ore having a high fines content. Precious metal heap leaching operations opt for cement in a dosage from 2.5 to 10 kg cement/t of ore (5–20 lb/ton) added to a cyanide solution. Copper ores are agglomerated with water and up to 40 kg sulfuric acid/t of ore (80 lb/ton) without binder. The agglomerate physical characteristics, with the exception of their strength, can be measured precisely and automatically. The impact of agglomeration on the in situ physical characteristics of the heap, other than the observable ponding and slumping, is not understood well. The most substantial benefits of agglomeration include up to 90% metal recovery from poorly permeable ores, shorter leach cycles, extra metal recovery from already-leached tailings, and better environmental heap closure. Keywords: agglomerationgoldcopperheap leachingpracticefundamentals ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The author expresses sincere thanks to Mr. Ryan Baker, Mr. Paul Martell, and the staff of the Placer Dome Inc. Library for collecting and referencing papers. The author is grateful to Dr. Robert H. Cuttriss, Dr. Ralph P. Hackl, and Dr. J. Pierre Constantineau for helpful suggestions in the preparation of the manuscript. Notes 1The designation (oxide) following the percent copper recovery indicates an operation processing copper oxide ores only.
Published in: Mineral Processing and Extractive Metallurgy Review
Volume 26, Issue 3-4, pp. 233-294