Heap bioleaching is gaining importance as an approach for the recovery of valuable metals (e.g. Cu 2+ ) from low grade ores. In this process iron and/or sulfur oxidising microorganisms are used to aid the oxidation of base metal sulfides in the ore, thereby liberating the metal ions into solution. Leach performance is strongly influenced by the contacting of the leach solution and the ore particles. In order to better understand the distribution of the leaching solution on the pore scale in these heaps, MagneticResonance Imaging (MRI) was used to acquire images non-invasively of a section of an irrigated ore bed. This was made possible by the use of specialist MRI acquisition sequences suited to the magnetically heterogeneous environment as presented by the ore material. From the images we were able to determine the pore-occupancy of the liquid and gas phases and to provide novel measurement of the interfacial area between air, leach solution and ore.
The threat of global warming due to CO 2 emissions has stimulated research into carbon sequestration and emissions reduction technologies. Alkaline scrubbing allows CO 2 to be captured as bicarbonate, which can be photochemically fixed by microalgae. The carbon concentrating mechanism (CCM), of which external carbonic anhydrase is a key component, allows the organisms to utilise this bicarbonate. In order to select a suitable strain for this application, a screening tool is required. The current method for determining carbonic anhydrase activity, the Wilbur and Anderson assay, was found to be unsuitable as a screening tool as the associated error was unacceptably large and tests on whole cells were inconclusive. This paper presents the development of a new, whole cell assay to measure inorganic carbon uptake and external carbonic anhydrase activity, based on classical pH drift experiments. Spirulina platensis was successfully used to develop a correlation between the specific carbon uptake (C) and the specific pH change (dpH). The relationship is described by: C (mmol C (g dry algae)-1 h-1) = 0.064 × (dpH). Inhibitor and salt dissociation tests validated the activity and presence of external carbonic anhydrase, and allowed correlation between the Wilbur and Anderson assay and the new whole cell assay. Screening tests were conducted on Spirulina platensis, Scenedesmus sp., Chlorella vulgaris and Dunaliella salina which were found to have carbon uptake rates of 5.76, 5.86, 3.86 and 2.15 mmol C (g dry algae)-1 h-1 respectively. These results corresponded to the species' known bicarbonate utilisation abilities and validated the use of the assay as a screening tool.
Heap bioleaching performance is dependent on the contacting of the leach solution with the ore bed, hence on the system hydrodynamics. In this study two experimental setups were used to examine hydrodynamics associated with irrigation from a single drip emitter, one of the most common methods of heap irrigation. A specialist magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) method which is insensitive to the metal content of the ore was used to examine the liquid flow into an ore bed in the immediate vicinity of an irrigation point. The distribution of liquid in, microbial colonisation of and mineral recovery from a bioleach of a large scale 132 kg "ore slice" were subsequently monitored using sample ports positioned along the breadth and height of the reactor. In both systems the lateral movement of the liquid increased with bed depth, though preferential flow was evident. The majority of the liquid flow was in the region directly below the irrigation point and almost no liquid exchange occurred in the areas of lowest liquid content at the upper corners of the bed in which fluid exchange was driven by capillary action. The MRI studies revealed that the liquid distribution was unchanging following an initial settling of the ore bed and that, at steady state, the majority (~60%) of the liquid flowed directly into established large channels. The limited lateral movement of the liquid had a significant impact on the local leaching efficiencies and microbial colonisation of the ore with cell concentrations in the regions of lowest liquid content lying below the detection limit. Hence poor lateral liquid distribution with drip irrigation, and the associated impact on colonisation was identified as a significant disadvantage of this irrigation approach. Further, the need to optimise fluid exchange throughout the ore bed was identified as key for optimisation of leaching performance.
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