Title
Microbial succession during a heap bioleaching cycle of low grade copper sulfides: Does this knowledge mean a real input for industrial process design and control?
Date Issued
21 July 2010
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
conference paper
Author(s)
Demergasso C.
Soto P.
Serón M.
Iturriaga V.
Universidad Católica Del Norte
Abstract
The paper Bacterial succession in bioheap leaching (Brierley, 2001) showed the search for methods to analyze the microbial dynamics in bioleaching industrial processes as a key challenge for advancing commercial bioheap applications. "Chemical and physical conditions within bioheaps change radically from the time the bioheap is stacked and inoculated until bioleaching is completed." The results from a comprehensive monitoring program by culturing and molecular techniques in an industrial bioleaching process for run-of-mine (ROM) low grade copper sulfide ore in Chile is summarized. The analysis of the compiled information permits an understanding of changes in microbial substrates availability, chemical and physical conditions. A data mining technique, called decision trees was used to analyze the information and to establish rules that represent patterns in the data. The bacterial succession in bioheap leaching solutions allowed the leaching cycle stages to be described as: i) Acid conditioning and soluble copper releasing, ii) Chalcocite Bacterial leaching (ferrous oxidation); iii) Chalcocite Bacterial leaching (ferrous and reduced sulfur compounds - RISC oxidation); iv) Bacterial leaching of sulfide minerals with higher rest potentials (pyrite and covellite), and v) Bacterial oxidation of remnant sulfide minerals and RISC. The impact of other factors on microbiology, such as the solvent-extraction process, aspects of the industrial design and operation are also discussed. © 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Start page
382
End page
390
Volume
104
Issue
April 3
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Ingeniería industrial Ecología Mineralogía
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-77957777240
Source
Hydrometallurgy
ISSN of the container
0304386X
Sponsor(s)
This work was supported, in part, by the FONDEF project D04I1169 from the Chilean Commission of Technology (CONICYT) . We would like to acknowledge the support given during this study by Enrique Becerra, Horacio Arias, Christian Espoz, Ana María Sánchez, Gabriel Ocaranza, Mauricio Rocha from Minera Escondida Ltda. and Viviana Urtuvia from Centro de Biotecnología. We also thank Dr. Claudio Meneses for his assistance in the results interpretation and Valle Coaloba for English corrections.
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus