Mining Mirror April 2018 | Page 24

Mining in focus It does however require the application of adequate water management and cyanide management plants, particularly descriptions of how cyanide- containing solutions and slurries are to be handled, stored, contained, and monitored, and in many cases, a plan will also include a description of treatment plants used to remove cyanide from solutions or slurries. According to a recent article written by Martin Sadongdong in the Philippine newspaper Manila Bulletin News, a Singapore-based firm introduced a new environment-friendly way of mining through a powder solution in lieu of toxic cyanide to extract gold and other precious metals. Zack Ho Xuan Yi, managing director of a company called Perfect 9, said in an interview with Sadongdong that he has developed a new powder solution, called P9 Au-568, that can be used to replace cyanide. From tests, Yi said that they realised that the powder worked, along with the benefits of it being faster, a higher extraction rate, and being non-toxic to people handling it. Aside from being environmentally friendly as it incorporates a non-toxic process, Yi claims that the powder solution can increase the gold extraction rate up to 90% and is four to eight times faster than the current extraction method being used. “It literally takes seconds to extract gold from an electronic chip,” said Yi. Future developments Research continues on the processing of gold, with the focus on becoming more cost-effective and environmentally friendly. Thiosulfate and alpha-cyclodextrin, a substance commonly extracted from corn starch, respectively, are researched to process and recover gold. Thiosulfate and bromide are used to leach the gold, in a similar way to cyanide, whilst the alpha-cyclodextrin is used in a similar fashion to carbon to recover the gold. Work is also being done using the amino acid glycine to extract gold. Glycine is manufactured from by-products of the natural gas industry. It forms a stable soluble complex with gold, which is soluble in water. Technical-grade glycine is cheaper than cyanide and available in roughly the same quantities. It is used in a similar [22] MINING MIRROR APRIL 2018 Miners in the Philippines exposed to cyanide, used to liberate gold. manner to existing gold refining processes such as CIL and CIP, while it also eliminates toxic waste disposal problems. The opportunity exists to recover and reuse the glycine, lowering the net costs. Amino acids need to be heated to 40–50°C to dissolve gold, thus reducing the energy requirements for such a process. In sufficiently warm underground environments, the process could be applicable to solution mining, where solvents are injected into an ore body and recovered along with the gold from a central borehole. Future applications are aimed at in situ heap leach extraction projects — a process that is expected to make mining low-grade deposits in remote locations more viable. Being an alkaline compound, it is well suited to extracting gold in alkaline ores such as dolomite, unlike sulphuric acid. Another upshot of this method is that the ores treated in this way require no milling, reducing energy consumption and associated costs. As civilisation progresses through the 21st century and global population numbers grow exponentially, the demand for water, energy, food, land, and other natural resources significantly increases. Therefore, no matter what gold recovery process is eventually adopted for a mining business, all stakeholders and the industry need to be sufficiently responsible to protect the environment, reduce energy consumption, manage costs responsibly, and forever find ways to recover, re-use, and recycle waste material produced. b Environment friendly cyanide