Litcius/Paper detail

Recovery of Copper from Leached Tailing Solutions by Biosorption

Sonia Cortés, Elizabeth E. Soto, Javier I. Ordóñez

2020Minerals28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Due to the progressive fall of the ore grades and the increasingly refractory composition of minerals, concentrating plants have increased which has led to an increase in the generation of tailings. Tailings, especially those obtained in the past, have remaining copper and other valuable species in quantities that can potentially be recovered, such as gold, silver, vanadium, and rare earth elements which transforms this abundant waste into a potential source of precious or strategic metals for secondary mining. One of the techniques of solid–liquid separation that processes solutions with low concentrations of metals corresponds to adsorption, and more recently biosorption, which is based on the use of biological matrices that do not constitute an environmental liability after application. Biosorption occurs as a consequence of the wide variety of active functional groups present in different types of biomass. Bacterial, fungal, plant, and algal biomasses have been described as biosorbents, mainly for the treatment of diluted and simple solutions. This work aims to recover copper from leached tailings using biomass of the red algae Gracilaria chilensis as a biosorbent. The tailing samples were taken from an abandoned deposit, in the north of Chile, and after an acid leaching copper was biosorbed, kinetics of adsorption and the equilibrium isotherms were studied, applying the Freundlich and Langmuir models. Operational parameters such as adsorbent dose, pH, and initial metal concentration were studied.

Topics & Concepts

TailingsBiosorptionLeaching (pedology)Freundlich equationCopperChemistryEnvironmental chemistryLangmuirAdsorptionBiomass (ecology)Pulp and paper industryEnvironmental scienceGeologySorptionPhysical chemistrySoil waterEngineeringOrganic chemistrySoil scienceOceanographyAdsorption and biosorption for pollutant removalMinerals Flotation and Separation TechniquesMetal Extraction and Bioleaching
Recovery of Copper from Leached Tailing Solutions by Biosorption | Litcius