Gold extraction or recovery
from its
ores may require a combination of
comminution,
mineral processing,
hydrometallurgical, and
pyrometallurgical processes to be performed
on the ore.
Gold mining from alluvium ores was once achieved by techniques
associated with
placer mining such as
simple gold panning and sluicing, resulting in direct recovery of
small gold nuggets and flakes. Placer mining techniques since the
mid to late 20th century have generally only been the practice of
artisan miners.
Hydraulic
mining was used widely in the Californian
gold rush, and involved
breaking down alluvial deposits with high-pressure jets of
water. Hard rock ores have formed the basis of the majority
of commercial gold recovery operations since the middle of the 20th
century where
open pit and or
sub-surface mining techniques are
used.
Once the ore is mined it can be treated as a whole ore using a
dump leaching or
heap leaching processes. This is typical of
low-grade, oxide deposits. Normally, the ore is crushed and
agglomerated prior to heap leaching. High grade ores and ores
resistant to
cyanide leaching at coarse
particle sizes, require further processing in order to recover the
gold values. The processing techniques can include grinding,
concentration, roasting, and pressure oxidation prior to
cyanidation.
Types of ore

Gold Nuggets found in Arizona
Gold occurs principally as a
native
metal, usually
alloyed to a greater or
lesser extent with
silver (as
electrum), or sometimes with
mercury (as an
amalgam). Native gold can occur as
sizeable nuggets, as fine grains or flakes in
alluvial deposits, or as grains or microscopic
particles embedded in other rocks.
Ores in which gold occurs in chemical composition with other
elements are comparatively rare. They include
calaverite,
sylvanite,
nagyagite,
petzite
and
krennerite.
Concentration
Gravity concentration has been historically the most important way
of extracting the native metal using pans or washing tables.
However,
froth flotation processes
may also be used to concentrate the gold. In some cases,
particularly when the gold is present in the ore as discrete coarse
particles, a gravity concentrate can be directly
smelted to form gold bars. In other cases,
particularly when the gold is present in the ore as fine particles
or is not sufficiently liberated from the host rock, the
concentrates are treated with
cyanide salts,
a process known as cyanidation leaching, followed by recovery from
the leach solution. Recovery from solution typically involves
adsorption on activated carbon followed by solution concentration
or stripping and or
electrowinning.
Froth flotation is usually applied when the gold present in an ore
is closely associated with
sulfide
minerals such as
pyrite or
arsenopyrite, and when such sulfides are
present in large quantities in the ore. In this case, concentration
of the sulfides results in concentration of gold values. Generally,
recovery of the gold from the sulfide concentrates requires further
processing, usually by
roasting or wet pressure oxidation.
These pyrometallurgical or hydrometallurgical treatments are
themselves usually followed by cyanidation and carbon adsorption
techniques for final recovery of the gold.
Sometimes gold is present as a minor constituent in a
base metal (e.g. copper) concentrate, and is
recovered as a by-product during production of the base metal. For
example, it can be recovered in the
anode
slime during the electrorefining process.
Leaching
If the gold can not be concentrated for smelting, then it is
leached by an
aqueous solution:
- The cyanide process is the
industry standard.
- Thiosulfate leaching has been proven
to be effective on ores with high soluble copper values or ores which experience pregrobbing by
carbonaceous components.
Refractory gold processes
A "refractory" gold ore is an ore that is naturally resistant to
recovery by standard cyanidation and carbon adsorption processes.
These refractory ores require pre-treatment in order for
cyanidation to be effective in recovery of the gold. A refractory
ore generally contains sulfide minerals, organic carbon, or both.
Sulfide minerals often trap or occlude gold particles, making it
difficult for the leach solution to complex with the gold. Organic
carbon present in gold ore may adsorb dissolved gold-cyanide
complexes in much the same way as activated carbon. This so-called
"preg-robbing" carbon is washed away because it is significantly
finer than the carbon recovery screens typically used to recover
activated carbon.
Pre-treatment options for refractory ores include:
- Roasting
- Bio-oxidation
- Pressure oxidation
- Ultrafine grinding
The refractory ore treatment processes may be preceded by
concentration (usually sulfide flotation).
Roasting is used to oxidize both the
sulfur and organic carbon at high temperatures using air and/or
oxygen. Bio-oxidation involves the use of bacteria that promote
oxidation reactions in an aqueous environment. Pressure oxidation
is an aqueous process for sulfur removal carried out in a
continuous autoclave, operating at high pressures and somewhat
elevated temperatures. Ultrafine grinding may be used when
liberation of gold particles from the surrounding mineral matrix is
the primary refractory characteristic of the ore.
Gold smelting
Mercury removal
Mercury is a health hazard,
especially when in gas form.To remove this hazard, before smelting,
gold precipitates from
electrowinning
or Merrill-Crowe processes are usually heated in a
retort to recover any
mercury present, that would otherwise
cause health and environmental problems due to its release
(volatilization) during smelting.The mercury present is not usually
from the
mercury amalgamation
process that is no longer used by formal gold mining companies, but
from mercury in the ore that has followed gold through the leaching
and precipitation processes.
In the event that there are high levels of
copper or
silver present,
leaching of the precipitate using
nitric
or
sulfuric acids may be
required.
Iron removal
Nitric acid or forced air oven oxidation can also be used to
dissolve iron from the electrowinning cathodes before smelting.
Gravity concentrates can often contain high grinding steel
contents, and so their removal using shaking tables or magnets is
used before smelting.During smelting iron can be oxidized using
nitre. Excessive use of nitre will corrode the
smelting pot, increasing both maintenance costs and the risk of
catastrophic leaks (known as
run-aways, or holes in the
pot through which the molten charge is lost).
Gold from electronics and other scrap

Electronic gold
Gold can be extracted from electronics scrap, scrap jewelry, and
dental scrap. The gold in these items is still valuable, but must
first be extracted from the scrap in order to be returned into
circulation in its purified form.
The greatest concentrations of gold in scrap electronics are in
CPUs, card edge connectors and component interconnects. The gold on
these items is typically plated in very thin layers, so to extract
a worthwhile quantity requires a large amount of outdated or
defective electronics and computer equipment. Additional sources
include manufacturers' scrap and surplus discrete electronic
components.
See also
References
Gallery
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