Leaching of bornite produced from the sulfurization of chalcopyrite.
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2016
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The pyrometallurgical route accounts for 80 pct of world metallic copper production, because
chalcopyrite, the most abundant copper sulfide, is refractory to hydrometallurgical treatment.
However, pyrometallurgical routes are quite restrictive as far as copper concentrates are
concerned mainly owing to limits on the concentration of impurities, such as fluorine, chlorine,
and arsenic that can be tolerated. Such concentrates require innovative processing solutions
because their market value is greatly reduced. A potential alternative is the transformation of
chalcopyrite to a sulfide amenable to leaching, such as chalcocite, covellite, or bornite, through
treatment in either aqueous or gaseous environments. In this study, the sulfurization of a
chalcopyrite concentrate containing 78 pct CuFeS2 in the presence of gaseous sulfur was
investigated, with the goal of demonstrating its conversion to the leachable phases, i.e., bornite
and covellite. The concentrate was reacted with elemental sulfur in a tubular furnace at
temperatures ranging from 573 K to 723 K (300 C to 450 C), followed by atmospheric
leaching in an Fe(III)-bearing solution. The mineral phases in the sample were quantified using
the Rietveld method, and it was shown that at temperatures below 673 K (400 C) chalcopyrite
was converted to covellite (41 pct) and pyrite (34 pct), whereas at temperatures above these, the
reaction products were bornite (45 pct) and pyrite (31 pct). Leaching tests [6 hours at 353 K
(80 C)] showed significantly higher copper extraction rates after sulfurization (90 pct) than
those using the raw chalcopyrite concentrate (15 pct).
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VELOSO, T. C. et al. Leaching of bornite produced from the sulfurization of chalcopyrite. Metallurgical and Materials Transactions. B, Process Metallurgy and Materials Processing Science, v. 47, p. 2005-2014, 2016. Disponível em: <https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11663-016-0621-1>. Acesso em: 24 jul. 2017.