Abstract

PurposeCurrently, almost all cyanide-free gold leaching processes are still in the development stage. Proactively investigating their environmental impacts prior to commercialization is of utmost importance. In this study, a detailed refractory gold concentrate process simulation with mass and energy balance was built for state-of-the-art technology with (i) pressure oxidation followed by cyanidation and, compared to alternative cyanide-free technology, with (ii) pressure oxidation followed by halogen leaching. Subsequently, the simulated mass balance was used as life cycle inventory data in order to evaluate the environmental impacts of the predominant cyanidation process and a cyanide-free alternative.MethodsThe environmental indicators for each scenario are based on the mass balance produced with HSC Sim steady-state simulation. The simulated mass balances were evaluated to identify the challenges in used technologies. The HSC Sim software is compatible with the GaBi LCA software, where LCI data from HSC-Sim is directly exported to. The simulation produces a consistent life cycle inventory (LCI). In GaBi LCA software, the environmental indicators of global warming potential (GWP), acidification potential (AP), terrestrial eutrophication potential (EP), and water depletion (Water) are estimated.Results and discussionThe life cycle assessment revealed that the GWP for cyanidation was 10.1 t CO2-e/kg Au, whereas the halogen process indicated a slightly higher GWP of 12.6 t CO2-e/kg Au. The difference is partially explained by the fact that the footprint is calculated against produced units of Au; total recovery by the halogen leaching route for gold was only 87.3%, whereas the cyanidation route could extract as much as 98.5% of gold. The addition of a second gold recovery unit to extract gold also from the washing water in the halogen process increased gold recovery up to 98.5%, decreasing the GWP of the halogen process to 11.5 t CO2-e/kg Au. However, both evaluated halogen processing scenarios indicated a slightly higher global warming potential when compared to the dominating cyanidation technology.ConclusionsThe estimated environmental impacts predict that the development-stage cyanide-free process still has some challenges compared to cyanidation; as in the investigated scenarios, the environmental impacts were generally higher for halogen leaching. Further process improvements, for example in the form of decreased moisture in the feed for halide leaching, and the adaptation of in situ gold recovery practices in chloride leaching may give the cyanide-free processing options a competitive edge.

Highlights

  • Cyanidation of gold has dominated the gold leaching industry since the 1900s as a generally effective and fairly low-cost process

  • The mass balance simulated in this study may predict higher water consumption and chemical consumption compared to what can be achieved on larger scale since (i) water from condensed steam is not recovered and (ii) leaching residue washing is not optimized for the halogen process

  • The current study presents refractory gold concentrate pressure oxidation and two different leaching process simulations: state-of-art cyanidation (SCE1) and cyanide-free halogen process (SCE2), still at the development stage

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Summary

Introduction

Cyanidation of gold has dominated the gold leaching industry since the 1900s as a generally effective and fairly low-cost process. The toxicity of cyanide and related strict environmental legislation control the use of cyanide and operations in the gold plant (Fleming 1992). These factors motivate the development of cyanide-free gold processes and their early-stage evaluation of process mass and energy balances as well as environmental impacts. A halogen process utilizing this phenomena has been researched by Lemieux et al (2014) and De Michelis et al (2013) Both these studies show that the hypohalide system can provide efficient gold leaching both on laboratory and demonstration scale

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