(19)
(11) EP 2 653 590 A2

(12) EUROPEAN PATENT APPLICATION
published in accordance with Art. 153(4) EPC

(88) Date of publication A3:
06.12.2012

(43) Date of publication:
23.10.2013 Bulletin 2013/43

(21) Application number: 11813915.3

(22) Date of filing: 09.12.2011
(51) International Patent Classification (IPC): 
C25C 1/20(2006.01)
C25D 3/46(2006.01)
C25C 5/02(2006.01)
C25D 3/48(2006.01)
(86) International application number:
PCT/MX2011/000151
(87) International publication number:
WO 2012/081952 (21.06.2012 Gazette 2012/25)
(84) Designated Contracting States:
AL AT BE BG CH CY CZ DE DK EE ES FI FR GB GR HR HU IE IS IT LI LT LU LV MC MK MT NL NO PL PT RO RS SE SI SK SM TR

(30) Priority: 13.12.2010 MX 2010013717

(71) Applicant: Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana
D.F. (MX)

(72) Inventors:
  • LAPIDUS LAVINE, Gretchen Terri
    D.F. 04650 México (MX)
  • ALONSO GÓMEZ, Alejandro Rafael
    Estado de México 57210 (MX)
  • BENAVIDES PEREZ, Ricardo
    C.P. 27268 Torréon, Coahulia (MX)
  • SILVA ALONSO, Javier Alejandro
    C.P. 4650 Distrito Federal (MX)
  • LARA VALENZUELA, Carlos
    C.P. 27268 Torréon, Coahulia (MX)

(74) Representative: Grünecker, Kinkeldey, Stockmair & Schwanhäusser 
Leopoldstrasse 4
80802 München
80802 München (DE)

   


(54) ELECTRO-RECOVERY OF GOLD AND SILVER FROM LEACHING SOLUTIONS BY MEANS OF SIMULTANEOUS CATHODIC AND ANODIC DEPOSITION


(57) The present invention is related to the mining and mineral or materials treatment industries that deal with gold and silver. Specifically, it is related to the process to recover gold and silver from thiosulfate or thiourea solutions, with an electrolysis that occurs simultaneously on both the anode and cathode. The advantages of the present invention, relative to the current state of technology, reside in the increased velocity and greatly reduced energy consumption in relation to those found in conventional electrolytic cells.




Description

FIELD OF THE INTENTION



[0001] The present invention is related to the mining industry for treatment of minerals and materials which contain gold and silver. Specifically, it is related to a process to recover gold and silver, from leaching solutions with a simultaneous anodic and cathodic electrodeposition process, after which the poor solution is recycled back to the leaching stage.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION



[0002] The recovery of gold and silver from their minerals has been performed by various methods; among the most employed are pyrometallurgical treatments, in which upon the addition of a considerable amount of energy, part of the mineral is oxidized, in this manner liberating the precious metals. This great amount of energy is the principal inconvenience of the process, which in the end reflects on the operation costs.

[0003] On the other hand, the hydrometallurgical methods are characterized for their high selectivity and relatively low reagent and energy costs. Gold and silver has been obtained by one such method for over 100 years, using cyanide and oxygen as a complexing agent and an oxidant, respectively. Despite the high efficiency of this system, the treatment of complex minerals, as well as environmental restrictions, has encouraged research on other leaching systems that could compete with cyanide, without its disadvantages.

[0004] Thiosulfate, in the presence of copper, and the combination of thiourea with formamidine disulfide (Poisot-Diaz, M.E., González, I. and Lapidus, G.T. (2008), " Effect of Copper, Iron and Zinc Ions on the Selective Electrodeposition of Dorée from Acidic thiourea Solutions", Hydrometallurgy 2008, Eds. C.A. Young, P.R. Taylor, C.G. Anderson y Y. Choi, Society for Mining, Metal-lurgy and Exploration, Inc. (SME), Littleton, Colorado, U.S.A., ISBN: 978-0-87335-266-6, pp. 843-848 and Alonso-Gómez, A.R. and Lapidus, G.T. (2008), "Pretreatment for Refractory Gold and Silver Minerals before Leaching with Ammoniacal Copper Thiosulfate", Hydrometallurgy 2008, Eds. C.A. Young, P.R. Taylor, C.G. Anderson y Y. Choi, Society for Mining, Metallurgy and Exploration, Inc. (SME), Littleton, Colorado, U.S.A., ISBN: 978-0-87335-266-6, pp. 817-822.) are two chemical systems that leach gold and silver from minerals for which cyanidation has proved to be inefficient. In this same manner, it was shown possible to recover gold and silver metals in both systems using direct electrodeposition (A. Alonso. G.T. Lapidus and I. González, A strategy to determine the potential interval for selective silver electrodeposition from ammoniacal thiosulfate solutions Hydrometallurgy, Volume 85, Issues 2-4, March 2007, Pages 144-153); However, this recovery was accomplished in geometrically complex reactors (F.C. Walsh, C. Ponce de Leon and C.T. Low, The rotating cylinder electrode (RCE) an its application to the electrodeposition of metals, Australian Journal of Chemistry, 58, (4), 246-262 and A. Alonso, G.T. Lapidus and I. González, Selective silver electroseparation from ammoniacal thiosulfate solutions using a rotating cylinder electrode reactor (RCE), Hydrometallurgy, Volume 92, Issues 3-4, June 2008, Pages 115-123), with an energy consumption that renders un attractive from an economic and financial standpoint.

[0005] At this point, it is important to mention a characteristic of the thiourea and thiosulfate systems: both complexing agents can oxidize at potentials near the reduction potential of silver (Figures 1 and 2). The diagrams of both ligands with gold are similar. This originates the formation of a narrow potential region where Ag(I) and Au(I) ions are soluble and because of this, both the leaching as well as the electroseparation conditions should be controlled with precision. This could imply a great disadvantage with respect to other systems and has motivated the use of membrane reactors, in order to avoid contact of these solutions with the anode.

OBJECTIVES OF THE INVENTION



[0006] One objective of the present invention is to provide a method to separate gold and silver from thiosulfate or thiourea solutions by simultaneous anodic and cathodic electrodeposition, increasing in this manner the velocity of the process. Another is to accomplish this with a minimum affectation of the solution composition, so that it may be recirculated back to the leaching stage. Yet another is to promote efficient energy use.

[0007] Other objectives and advantages that apply the principles and are derived from the present invention may be apparent from the study of the following description and diagrams that are included here for illustrative and not limitative purposes.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION



[0008] The present invention is intended to solve the problem of gold ans silver separation from thiosulfate and thiourea leaching solutions, providing an improvement over the traditional electro-chemical reactors now in use. This improvement is characterizes by a novel process to simultaneously deposit metals in on the anode and cathode in a one compartment reactor, using a commercial copper sheet as the anode and a titanium sheet as the cathode.

[0009] The conditions which permit this technique to operate were chosen from the analysis of Figure 1, where a region of the soluble complex Ag(S2O3)23- is observed within the metallic silver stability zone. When the potential is decreased below -110 mV, the Ag(I) species is reduced to Ag0, in a typical electrolytic process. However, the most interesting aspect of this diagram is when the potential is less negative than -50 mV, where part of the thiosulfate oxidizes, destabilizing the soluble complex and forming metallic silver. The present invention takes advantage of this phenomenon and has not been previously reported for this or other ligands.

[0010] The application of the simultaneous anodic-cathodic electrodeposition of gold and silver allows more efficient use of the electrical energy in electrochemical reactors of simple geometry without a membrane; additionally, the separation process occurs in less time than that required in conventional electrochemical reactors.

[0011] In order to better understand the characteristics of the invention, the following description is accompanied by diagrams and figures, which form an integral part of the same and are meant to be illustrative but not limitative and are described in the following section.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS



[0012] 

Figure 1 is a Pourbaix-type diagram in which the predominance zones for the soluble species Ag(S2O3)23- (thiosulfate-silver complex) and metallic silver Ag0 are shown.

Figure 2 is a Pourbaix-type diagram in which the predominance zones for the soluble species AgTu3+ (thiourea-silver complex) and metallic silver Ag0 are shown.

Figure 3 shows a leaching-electrodeposition scheme for obtaining gold and silver which utilizes the present invention.

Figure 4 is a diagram showing a recirculation system which includes the electrochemical reactor.

Figure 5 is a schematic diagram of the electrochemical cell in which the simultaneous anodic and cathodic deposits are achieved.

Figure 6 is a graphic representation of the change in silver concentration with leaching time.

Figure 7 is a graphic representation of the change in silver concentration with electrolysis time where there is simultaneous anodic and cathodic electrodeposition.

Figure 8 is a graph that compares the change in silver concentration for leaches 1, 2 and 3 with the same solution.

Figure 9 shows the comparison of the silver concentration during electrolysis 1, 2 and 3 with the same solution.


DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION



[0013] The simultaneous electrodeposition process, referred to in the present invention, is illustrated in Figure 3.
  • A thiosulfate or thiourea solution, rich in gold and silver ions, originating from the leaching stage (100) and after having been filtered (200), is introduced into the electrochemical reactor (300).
  • Once the electrodeposition has finalized, the cathode (312, Figure 5) and the anode (313, Figure 5) are removed from the reactor and mechanically abraded to remove the gold and silver metals. The solution is then recirculated back to the leaching stage (301).


[0014] The electrodeposition is performed in a recirculation scheme, illustrated in Figure 4, in which the solution is charged to the reservoir (320) from which it is pumped (330) to the electrochemical reactor (310) and then returned by gravity to the reservoir.

EXAMPLES


EXAMPLE 1



[0015] To better understand the invention, one of the many experiments is detailed as an example, which employs a system such as that schematized in Figures 3 to 5. A 60 cm2 (exposed geometrical area) titanium plate was used as the cathode and a copper plate with the same exposed area was the anode.

[0016] As shown in Figure 3, the first stage is gold and silver leaching from the mineral or concentrate, using a thiosulfate solution, in this case, whose composition is presented in Table 1. The pH was adjusted to 10.0 with NH4OH.
Table 1. Composition of the leaching solution
Component Composition (mol/L)
(NH4)2S2O3 0.2
CuSO4 0.05
EDTA 0.025
(NH4)2HPO4 0.1


[0017] The solutions were prepared with reagent grade chemicals using deionized water (1x1010 MΩcm-1). 500 mL of this solution was placed in contact with 3.75 g of a flotation concentrate, with a particle size less than 10 µm, containing 21 kg/ton of silver. After six hours in continuous agitation, the solution was separated from the solid by filtration and placed in a reactor such as that represented in Figures 4 and 5.

[0018] During the electrodeposition, a flow of 1.1 L/min was used with a cell voltage of 100 mV; with this voltage, the potential at the cathode was -260 mV versus the normal hydrogen electrode (NHE), which is adequate to obtain a selective silver deposit on this electrode

[0019] Figure 6 shows a graphic representation of the silver concentration with respect to the leaching time. A maximum value was attained in 120 minutes, after which time the concentration remained relatively constant.

[0020] The change in silver concentration during the electrolysis is shown in Figure 7. Within the first 15 minutes a sharp descent is observed, which then gradually decreases to values below 10 mg/L. The current registered throughout the experiment was 0.01 A, which together with the cell voltage translates to 0.004 W-h. Considering that the deposited mass of silver was 0.065 g, the energy consumption was 0.062 W-h per g of deposited silver.

[0021] After finalizing the electrodeposition, the solution was recycled back to the leaching stage, where it was contacted with fresh unleached concentrate, under the same conditions as described previously. The entire procedure was repeated until three full cycles were completed.

[0022] Figure 8 shows a graphic representation of the leaching results for all three cycles; an increase in the leaching velocity and the maximum silver concentration may be observed in the second and third leach, relative to the first, possibly due to the stabilization of the equilibria between the thiosulfate and the Cu(II) and Cu(I) ions.

[0023] On the other hand, the second and third electrolyses (the dashed and dotted lines of Figure 9) show similar tendencies to that of the first (solid line), only differentiable by the initial value, which depends on the previous leaching stage. In all three cases, the values reached below 10 mg/L in approximately 4 hours.

[0024] These results clearly show that the thiosulfate solution can be recirculated after the electrodeposition stage, back to the leaching stage, at least three times without reconditioning or make-up. Additionally, during the three electrolyses, the current maintained a constant value of 0.01 A, conserving the same energy expenditure as the first cycle. Anode consumption was negligible after three electrodeposition cycles.

[0025] Finally, it is important to mention that X-ray diffraction analysis of both the anodic and the cathodic deposits showed that they consisted exclusively of metallic silver

[0026] Having described the invention, being considered a novelty and, because of this is demanded as property the content of the following claim.


Claims

1. Electrolysis for the gold and silver recovery from thiosulfate or thiourea leaching solutions characterized by accomplishing metallic deposits simultaneously on the anode and cathode surfaces, by operating in the potential zones that permit silver or gold reduction at the cathode and ligand oxidation at the anode.
 
2. Electrolysis for the gold and silver recovery from thiosulfate or thiourea leaching solutions characterized by the solution having the following additive composition:
Component Composition (mol/L)
(NH4)2S2O3 0.2
CuSO4 0.05
EDTA 0.025
(NH4)2HPO4 0.1

 




Drawing




















Cited references

REFERENCES CITED IN THE DESCRIPTION



This list of references cited by the applicant is for the reader's convenience only. It does not form part of the European patent document. Even though great care has been taken in compiling the references, errors or omissions cannot be excluded and the EPO disclaims all liability in this regard.

Non-patent literature cited in the description