Abstract

In the actual mining scenario, copper bioleaching, mainly raw mined material known as run-of-mine (ROM) copper bioleaching, is the best alternative for the treatment of marginal resources that are not currently considered part of the profitable reserves because of the cost associated with leading technologies in copper extraction. It is foreseen that bioleaching will play a complementary role in either concentration—as it does in Minera Escondida Ltd. (MEL)—or chloride main leaching plants. In that way, it will be possible to maximize mines with installed solvent-extraction and electrowinning capacities that have not been operative since the depletion of their oxide ores. One of the main obstacles for widening bioleaching technology applications is the lack of knowledge about the key events and the attributes of the technology’s critical events at the industrial level and mainly in ROM copper bioleaching industrial operations. It is relevant to assess the bed environment where the bacteria–mineral interaction occurs to learn about the limiting factors determining the leaching rate. Thus, due to inability to accurately determine in-situ key variables, their indirect assessment was evaluated by quantifying microbial metabolic-associated responses. Several candidate marker genes were selected to represent the predominant components of the microbial community inhabiting the industrial heap and the metabolisms involved in microbial responses to changes in the heap environment that affect the process performance. The microbial community’s predominant components were Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans, At. thiooxidans, Leptospirillum ferriphilum, and Sulfobacillus sp. Oxygen reduction, CO2 and N2 fixation/uptake, iron and sulfur oxidation, and response to osmotic stress were the metabolisms selected regarding research results previously reported in the system. After that, qPCR primers for each candidate gene were designed and validated. The expression profile of the selected genes vs. environmental key variables in pure cultures, column-leaching tests, and the industrial bioleaching heap was defined. We presented the results obtained from the industrial validation of the marker genes selected for assessing CO2 and N2 availability, osmotic stress response, as well as ferrous iron and sulfur oxidation activity in the bioleaching heap process of MEL. We demonstrated that molecular markers are useful for assessing limiting factors like nutrients and air supply, and the impact of the quality of recycled solutions. We also learned about the attributes of variables like CO2, ammonium, and sulfate levels that affect the industrial ROM-scale operation.

Highlights

  • The Chilean copper industry will be mostly based on the exploitation of sulfide ore reserves in the coming years [1] because of the exhaustion of oxide resources

  • RNA quantity obtained from culture samples ranged between 20–200 ng/μL while the quality for 260/280 and 260/230 ratios ranged between 1.5–2.1 and 0.9–2.0, respectively, as expected for this kind of sample

  • The analysis performed on the RNA obtained from bioleaching columns and industrial-strip samples (Table S2) revealed that, in general, RNA presented good and acceptable quantity and quality ranges for transcriptomic RTqPCR analyses

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Summary

Introduction

The Chilean copper industry will be mostly based on the exploitation of sulfide ore reserves in the coming years [1] because of the exhaustion of oxide resources. Mineral concentration is the primary process currently used for copper extraction from sulfide ores. Copper leaching in concentrated chloride media under ambient conditions is already used in several Chilean operations to benefit secondary sulfide ore [4]. It is foreseen that bioleaching will play a complementary role in concentration and chloride primary leaching operations, considering that it is not necessary to consider the capital cost for installing the solvent extraction and electrowinning (SX/EW) plants, which are already installed. This was the case at the ROM bioleaching plant at Minera Escondida Ltd. The potential of bioleaching to enable recovery of metals from deposits to process available resources that are not amenable to metal recovery by any other means has been assessed, e.g., in Europe as well, aiming to develop environmentally sustainable mining operations [5]

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