Abstract

The present paper gives the thus far unpublished results of a pilot-scale heap leaching test of a Greek low-grade nickel oxide ore, aiming at verifying, at a large scale, the amenability of Greek laterites to heap leaching by the HELLAS (Heap Leaching LAteriteS) process, developed at the National Technical University of Athens for the first time worldwide and patented by some of the authors as early as in 1991. The test was conducted at the site of Aghios Ioannis mine of G.M.M.S.A. LARCO in 2006–2008 and was financed and supervised by the Institute of Geology and Mineral Exploration (I.G.M.E). The ore sample, 800 t, was from the “Triada” deposit of LARCO, in Euboea, and contained 0.73% nickel, 0.06% cobalt, 35.6% iron and 15% silicon. The ore was ground to −18 mm and the leaching agent was 2N (100 g/L) sulphuric acid solution. The nickel and cobalt recoveries obtained at the time of termination but not completion of the test, after four leaching cycles and 114 days of irrigation, were 60 and 36%, respectively. The corresponding nickel and cobalt concentrations in the produced leach liquor were 3.4 and 0.17 g/L, respectively. The value of the ratio Fe/Ni in the leach liquor was 10/1, much lower than the value 45/1 in the ore, thus showing the selectivity of the leaching of nickel over iron in the Greek ores by the above method. The consumption of sulphuric acid was 66 kg H2SO4/kg Ni recovered. The preliminary feasibility study, that followed the test, confirmed the economic viability of the integrated HELLAS process for the low-grade nickel oxide ores of Greece.

Highlights

  • After the whole volume of the leach solution had percolated through the heap, completing one full leach cycle, its free acid concentration was measured and adjusted to the initial pre-determined value

  • The “Heap Leach LAteriteS” (HELLAS) process comprises heap leaching of the ore with dilute sulphuric acid at ambient temperature, purification of the leach liquor by chemical precipitation at atmospheric pressure and recovery of nickel and cobalt from the purified leach liquor either by solvent extraction and electrowinning or by chemical precipitation [1–24]

  • The analysis clearly showed that the main nickeliferous mineral in the ore was chlorite, rich in iron

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Summary

Introduction

After the whole volume of the leach solution had percolated through the heap, completing one full leach cycle, its free acid concentration was measured and adjusted to the initial pre-determined value. A high proportion of nickel, 25.4% in the laterite sample, occurred in the lattice of haematite, which does not dissolve under the intentionally mild leach conditions of the HELLAS process.

Results
Conclusion

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