The Effect of Surface Oxidation on the Cu Activation of Pentlandite and Pyrrhotite
The addition of copper sulfate to mineral slurries in order to activate sulfide mineral surfaces for enhanced collector molecule adsorption, and hence enhanced recovery via flotation, is a common mineral processing practice. It has been established in a laboratory situation that the addition of CuSO4 in conjunction with xanthate collector increases the flotation rate of pentlandite as compared to the addition of collector alone. However, it remains unclear whether the addition of CuSO4 has a similar effect within mineral processing circuits. We examine here the effect of pre-activation oxidation on the copper activation of pentlandite and monoclinic and hexagonal pyrrhotite.All activation experiments were carried out at pH 9 using a total solution content of copper ions equivalent to one monolayer (0.2×10-4 moles, 1×10-4 M). Copper loss from solution was extremely rapid in all cases with less than 10 % remaining after 10s. EDTA extraction and solution analysis clearly demonstrated that copper activation was via direct surface adsorption and not an ion exchange process, as is the case for sphalerite, and that most copper on the surfaces is in the form of Cu(Ⅰ).ToF-SIMS analyses of the mineral surfaces subsequent to copper activation show increased surface oxidation on increased conditioning time prior to copper activation. However, there is a significant decrease in surface oxidation on comparison of samples that have otherwise been prepared in the same manner but where one has been exposed to copper solution rather than water. This suggests that copper activation stabilises the surface and reduces the propensity for oxidation. Regardless of the length of pre-activation oxidation time only Fe(Ⅲ) (no Fe(Ⅱ)-S) was observed by XPS analysis, indicating a highly oxidised surface layer dominated by Fe-O-OH species.The presence of Cu(Ⅱ) on the mineral surface is indicative of the formation of Cu(Ⅱ)-containing precipitates and indicates non-mineral specific activation resulting in increased recovery but lower grade. Mineral specific copper adsorption, as evidenced by the presence of Cu(Ⅰ), is required to improve both grade and recovery. Prolonged oxidation prior to copper activation causes a reduction in the Cu(Ⅰ) to Cu(Ⅱ) ratio on the mineral surfaces as compared to either fresh surfaces or surfaces oxidised for 1 minute only. This strongly indicates that the copper activation process is less effective on highly oxidised surfaces.
Cu activation Pentlandite Pyrrhotite Surface oxidation
A.R. Gerson M. Jasieniak
Applied Centre for Structural and Synchrotron Studies, University of South Australia, Mawson Lakes, Ian Wark Research Institute, University of South Australia, Mawson Lakes, Australia
国际会议
XXIV International Mineral Processing Congress(第24届国际矿物加工大会)
北京
英文
1054-1063
2008-09-24(万方平台首次上网日期,不代表论文的发表时间)