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Geometallurgical Studies on Gold Ore for Enhanced Comminution and Leaching

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dc.contributor.author Ofori-sarpong, Grace
dc.contributor.author Okwaisie, Timothy
dc.contributor.author Amankwah, K. Richard
dc.date.accessioned 2023-08-31T18:43:44Z
dc.date.available 2023-08-31T18:43:44Z
dc.date.issued 2019-06-01
dc.identifier.citation Harvard en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/753
dc.description.abstract Many gold processing plants are experiencing challenges as mining pits are becoming deeper, rocks are getting harder and more complex polymetallic and refractory ores are being encountered. The variations in the characteristics of ores lead to deviations from the established parameters, and these affect gold extraction efficiency. This paper presents a study where geological characteristics of the ore types from some mining pits were used to ascertain the influence of ore blends on improving the performances of comminution and leaching circuits. To achieve this, mineralogical, comminution, gravity recoverable gold and leaching investigations were conducted on fresh and weathered ore samples and their blends. Mineralogical study showed that the main rock types associated with the mine pits were dolerite, phyllites, conglomerates and sandstone. The dominant minerals were quartz, plagioclase, with traces of pyrites. The Crushability Work Indices of the rocks were between 30 and 37 KWh/t, which are generally higher than the maximum design value of 31.9 kWh/t, and this situation will pose throughput challenges in that section. The Bond Ball Mill Work Indices of the blends tested were between 16.4 kWh/t and 9.6 kWh/t and a blend ratio of 85% fresh and 15% weathered was found to have a Bond Ball Work Index almost equal to the design value of 14 kWh/t. With gold assays of 2.5 g/t for dolerite, 2.1 g/t for phyllite, 3.7 g/t for sandstone and 3.4 g/t for conglomerate, the gravity recoverable gold was in the order of sandstone 36% > phyllite (31.5%) > dolerite (29.5%) > conglomerate (18%). The overall gold recoveries were in the sequence of conglomerate (95%), sandstone (94%), phyllite (92%) and dolerite (87%). This information could be utilised in developing a proactive plant operations strategies for an operating plant in order to ultimately manage the plant and enhance achievement of set targets. en_US
dc.publisher Ghana Mining Journal en_US
dc.subject Geometallurgy, Ore Blends, Characterisation, Communition Circuit Performance, Gold Recovery en_US
dc.title Geometallurgical Studies on Gold Ore for Enhanced Comminution and Leaching en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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