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The gold in Kalgoorlie ore occurs in several different
forms, each requiring its own special treatment route
to enable the precious metal to be recovered and refined.
Ore delivered from the Superpit is processed through
two treatment plants at KCGM called the Fimiston Plant
and Gidji Roaster.
The treatment process involves many steps:
1. Crushing (Fimiston)
2. Grinding (Fimiston)
3. Froth flotation (Fimiston)
4. Roasting (Gidji)
5. Carbon In Leach - CIL (Fimiston and Gidji)
6. Gold recovery (Fimiston)
At Fimiston there are two circuits that treat different
ore types. The sulphide ore from the Super Pit is the
most difficult to treat and this is the process we describe
here.
Crushing
Crushing involves tipping ore from the Superpit into
a large crushing machine. This machine is just a large
chamber that contains a swinging weight.
Usually large dump trucks tip the ore directly into
the chamber. The swinging weight compresses and fractures
any large or small rocks into smaller rocks. 50% of
the rocks from this process are smaller than your fist
in size.
The smaller rocks are dropped onto a large travelling
rubber belt. This belt is called a conveyor. Conveyor
systems are used all over the world in the mining industry.
Conveyors are good at deliveries rocks quickly to large
stockpiles. The stockpile at Fimiston contains 105 000
tonnes of rocks ready for treatment.
Grinding
Grinding is the process that breaks fist size rocks
to very fine particle sizes. This is done in large rotating
mills that look like a huge steel drum. These mills
are called SAG mills or ball mills. These mills contain
various amounts of small or large steel balls inside
that are rotated to cause collisions with the rock fed
to the mill. The balls break the rock fragments into
extremely fine rock particles. Water is added to this
process to ensure that all the fine particles are flushed
from the mill to the next process.
The size of rock particles after milling is less than
1/5 of one millimetre. To break rock to this very fine
size involves using a lot of electrical power. The Fimiston
SAG mill alone uses 12 megawatts of power (enough to
operate all the homes in 2 small towns).
All rock particles formed during grinding now travel
with water added to the mills. This mixture is called
a slurry. The slurry from milling is transported around
the treatment plant by special pumps.
Flotation
This process uses chemicals to collect both Gold and
Pyrite (fools gold) into a concentrated form.
Special chemicals are added to the slurry from grinding.
These attach themselves to certain minerals in the slurry.
All the slurry is pumped to large tanks called flotation
cells. Air is added to the bottom of flotation cells
and rises through the slurry. The chemicals added earlier
are hydrophobic (dont like being in water) so
they attach themselves to the passing air bubbles and
float to the top of the cell. When the air bubbles reach
the top of the cell they form a froth much like the
top of a cappuccino. This froth contains nearly all
the gold and the fools gold.
When the froth becomes too full it spills over the
edge of the flotation cell and is collected into a launder.
The launder contents are discharged and pumped into
storage tanks. The concentrate grade contained in these
storage tanks is 2 gold ounces per tonne of ore treated.
The contents of these tanks are eventually passed over
a vacuum filter and the water is removed for reuse in
the process. The high-grade solids that are left (filtered
concentrates) are virtually dry so they can be conveyed
to a stockpile then loaded into trucks and sent to the
Gidji roaster site for further treatment.
All the material that did not float is called tailings.
Tailings is the word used to describe slurry with low
gold content.
The flotation tailings are passed through another process
called CIL before being sent to a large storage dam.
Roasting
All the concentrates delivered to Gidji from Fimiston
are remixed with water to make a new slurry. This is
pumped into 2 large roasters.
Roasting is the process used to convert the concentrates
from flotation into a red calcine. It does this by heating
the concentrate slurry to over 600oC. The water from
the slurry and sulphur dioxide gas from the concentrates
rises through a large stack and is emitted to the atmosphere
at Gidji. This stack is 178m tall.
The material roasted undergoes a change in colour from
black to red as the sulphur dioxide is removed. The
red colour remaining is called calcine.
Calcine is leached and adsorbed onto carbon in a process
called CIL.
CIL
All the flotation tailings and the calcine are processed
by CIL at Fimiston and Gidji respectively. CIL means
carbon in leach.
This process involves addition of chemicals to dissolve
the gold then collection of the gold into a super rich
grade on carbon. Carbon is used as it has a large surface
area and can adsorb large amounts of gold from the slurry.
Carbon has a very large surface area (1 gram of carbon
has the same surface area as a tennis court), and one
of the best basic ingredients for carbon is coconut
shells!. Carbon is formed in a special kiln operated
at over 1000oC in Sri Lanka after breaking the coconut
shells into little fragments.
The carbon used in the CIL process can be reused many
times by reactivating it in a kiln operated at Fimiston.
All the gold captured on the carbon is then removed
from the carbon by the elution process.
Gold recovery
The first step of gold recovery from carbon is called
elution.
Elution involves feeding the carbon into a special
pressure vessel called a column. The carbon is pumped
to the column and the water is drained. A mixture of
caustic soda and cyanide is pumped through the column
to contact the carbon. This mixture extracts the gold
from the carbon to make a concentrated solution of gold.
This solution is transported to tanks located at the
gold room
The second recovery phase is called electrowinning.
Electrowinning takes place in a secure building called
the gold room.
Electrowinning uses the science of electrolysis to
plate the gold from solution onto steel cathodes. Electrolysis
uses electrical current to ensure that steel is dissolved
and gold is removed from solution. Electrolysis experiments
are often completed at schools during science classes.
Once all the gold has been plated on the cathodes the
cathodes are removed and washed with a water pressure
cleaner. The gold is collected and water is removed
in a filter press. The remainder is dried in large ovens.
The dried cake removed from these ovens are put in
large crucibles and placed in a furnace to melt the
gold. These furnaces operate at over 1000oC.
The molten material is later poured into ingots to
make gold bars called bullion.
The gold grade of KCGM bullion varies from 65
80% gold. The remainder of the bullion is mostly silver.
All the gold bars are stamped and then collected by
security guards. The guards transport the KCGM gold
to the Australian Gold Refinery in Perth. The refinery
increases the bar grade to above 99.5% gold.
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