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Bioleaching of Chalcopyrite Waste Rock in the Presence of the Copper Solvent Extractant LIX984N. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Heap bioleaching utilizes microorganisms to extract metal ions from sulfide minerals, particularly copper, from low-grade ores, often aided by solvent extraction (SX) and electrowinning methods.
  • The introduction of SX reagent (2.5% v/v LIX984N in kerosene) can inhibit microbial activity, especially affecting biofilm formation and sulfur oxidation, which are critical for efficient bioleaching.
  • Different microbes respond uniquely to varying concentrations of SX reagent; one strain showed resilience at 100-300 mg/L, while another was completely inhibited at 50 mg/L, indicating variances in metabolic preferences and their impact on copper extraction efficiency.

Article Abstract

Heap bioleaching, the solubilization of metal ions from metal sulfides by microbial oxidation, is often combined with solvent extraction (SX) and electrowinning to recover, e.g., copper from low-grade ores. After extraction, the leaching solution is recycled, but the entrained organic solvents may be toxic to the microorganisms. Here , , and were selected to perform bioleaching of chalcopyrite waste rock in the presence of the SX reagent (2.5% v/v LIX984N in kerosene). Possibly inhibitory effects have been evaluated by copper extraction, bacterial activity, number of actively Fe(II)-oxidizing cells, and biofilm formation. Microcalorimetry, most probable number determination, and atomic force microscopy combined with epifluorescence microscopy were applied. The results show that 100 and 300 mg/L SX reagent could hardly inhibit from oxidizing Fe, but they seriously interfered with the biofilm formation and the oxidization of sulfur, thereby hindering bioleaching. was sensitive to 50 mg/L SX reagent, which inhibited its bioleaching completely. showed different metabolic preferences, if the concentration of the SX reagent differed. With 10 mg/L LIX984N preferred to oxidize Fe and extracted the same amount of copper as the assay without LIX984N. With 50 mg/L extractant the bioleaching stopped, since preferred to oxidize reduced inorganic sulfur compounds.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8972061PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2022.820052DOI Listing

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