This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 63/268,738, filed Mar. 1, 2022, and titled SYSTEMS AND METHODS FOR USING EXTERNAL AND INTERNAL REACTORS TO PRODUCE AND USE A CUSTOM TREATMENT FLUID TO CHANGE THE INTERNAL CONDITIONS OF PILES, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
The present disclosure relates to heap or pile, leaching and related processes.
Many industrial, commercial, and residential materials are placed in piles and impoundments, prior to manufacturing and processing for market. Materials may also be placed in piles, dumps, landfills, sanitary landfills, stockpiles and impoundments for storage and disposal, both short and long term. Examples include mine waste rock dumps, municipal solid waste dumps, and any-placed dumps or piles. In addition, a common technique for extracting metal from ores and other mineral material is heap leaching. In heap leaching, mined products are placed in piles and impoundments for treatment. An engineered heap of fractured, fragmented, un-consolidated rock or particulate material may be constructed, typically over an engineered liner and liquid collection system for metal, chemical and mineral extraction. A leach solution is applied to the pile surface and percolated through the heap to contact the material and dissolve one or more metal and minerals of interest into the leach solution. Sprinklers are occasionally used for irrigation of the heap, but drip irrigation is more commonly used to minimize evaporation and more uniformly distribute the leaching solution. The solution, called a “barren solution or raffinate,” containing metal and mineral dissolving reagents or lixiviants, percolates through the heap, leaches the target metal/chemical/mineral/substance, and dissolves other materials. This process, called the “leach cycle,” can take between a couple of days to months or years depending on the material being leached. Waste rock, industrial feedstocks, and all types of waste products may be stacked in piles with or without liners, depending on, for example, the material which makes up the pile, existing regulations and storage practices and the downstream processes which may involve short or long-term disposal.
Theoretically, in heap leaching, the barren solution or fluid travels substantially vertically through the heap in a fairly uniform manner from each drip or irrigation point due to gravity, which is based on the physical and mineral characterization of the material stacked (i.e., its size, voidage, permeability, compaction, etc.) in the formation of the heap or in the material placed underneath each drip or irrigation point. In reality, within a relatively short period of time, a path of least resistance, or a near vertical channel, forms in the heap, starting at each drip or irrigation point, and based on the formation or the material placed underneath the drip or irrigation point. This process is just like large surface water gradient movement from storms creating channels, troughs, and gullies from water erosion. Each path of least resistance is likely to be near vertical for permeable material and near horizontal for impermeable material, and as a result, solutions may bypass large sections or volumes of the heap or pile such that they may receive no barren solution after a period of time, and relatively little or no leaching of the target material may occur. Also, the leach solution may not uniformly contact all portions of the heap because of permeability variations existing within the heap or pile, such as volumes of clay material with low permeability. In addition, within the heap or pile, there may be material that exhibits low permeability and does not let solution or fluid pass by the force of gravity, thus entraining or pooling the solution above the low-permeable heap or pile material. Such permeability variations may result in preferential flow of the leach solution through more permeable portions of the heap, leaving volumes of under-leached or un-leached material below less permeable portions, and areas of fluid retention and saturation above these less permeable portions.
Also, the chemical and mineral properties in some portions of the heap may be less responsive to dissolution of the metal or mineral into the leach fluid. There may be an undesirable natural or precipitated sulfide or oxide mineral coating on the target metal or mineral for leaching, or mineral encapsulation of the target metal or mineral that reduces the leaching efficiency. For example, when heap leaching copper with an acid leach solution, high alkaline pH spots within the heap may not respond well to the acid leach solution and may lead to reduced permeability, chemical precipitation, and mineral encapsulation (scale), rock decrepitating, migration of fines, heap settlement and compaction, leaving those portions under-leached or un-leached as well as volumes of solution retention and pools in the heap. Metals and minerals remaining in under-leached, un-leached portions as well as pools of fluid with dissolved metals and minerals entrained in a heap during and following heap leach operations often represent a significant loss of un-recovered inventory to a mining operation.
In another example, piles of feedstock and waste may be stacked in a manner to isolate the material from the environment. The piles are often covered and lined to prevent meteoric water from reacting with constituents in the pile and impacting and/or degrading surface and ground water. In most heap leaching, a heap collection system collects the resulting pregnant leach solution (i.e., the solution containing the products (metals, minerals and chemicals) of chemical dissolution reactions or leaching) drained from the liner and the pregnant solution is then processed to recover the dissolved metal and minerals. Once the target material (including mineral and metal) has been removed from the pregnant solution via a recovery process, the once again barren or raffinate solution, often containing additional reagents and added lixiviants from processing, may be reused in the heap leach process by pumping the barren solution back to the top surface of the heap or treated further to remove certain undesirable chemicals or constituents.
A common problem with heap leaching is the non-uniform fluid flow or solution channeling, through a heap and resultant incomplete leaching of metals from the heap. Even after extensive leaching over time, some portions of the heap may remain under-leached or even substantially un-leached. In addition, this problem is often associated with uneven permeability of the material placed as a heap, with heap compaction, chemical precipitation, metal and mineral encapsulation, rock and mineral decrepitation, and migration of fines, which separately or together can result in a pool of fluid above a low permeable zone. This pool may be of significant tenor or grade with a large quantity of pregnant solution and may also contain considerable unrecovered metal and mineral values. This pool can migrate in a near horizontal direction and daylight on the side slope of the heap or pile because of the fluid head build up from applied solutions and meteoric rain and snow. The presence of an internal fluid pool within a heap increases the total weight of the heap on the foundation and liner, (example, dry weight compared to wet, saturated weight) and lubricates the heap material thereby significantly reducing the inter-particle cohesion and friction. The undrained weight added to the reduced friction and reduced cohesion for the material in the heap can impact the heap's integrity and geotechnical stability leading to heap movement and failure.
Heap leaching ore generally has a lower metal recovery than grinding and tank leaching of most ores. The finer grind and particle liberation by milling will enhance the surface area of the particles thus improving the leaching kinetics and metal recovery. However, mills, tanks and tails disposal represent a large capital, operational and reclamation expense. Heap leaching is less capital and operator intensive and the heaps and solutions are contained within an engineered lined facility.
Man-made piles of manufacturing feedstocks and post processing or use, are also dumped in stacks and piles, like landfills, some lined and some on natural soil. These piled materials may respond to the natural elements of sunlight, rain, snow, wind, and seasons temperatures and depending on the composition of the material in the pile, may react producing products or byproducts that may impact the environment via fluid pathways in a negative way.
The written disclosure herein describes illustrative embodiments that are non-limiting and non-exhaustive. Reference is made to certain of such illustrative embodiments that are depicted in the figures, in which:
A system and method for rechanneling fluid flow in a heap or pile to recover a target material or change the biological, chemical, microbiological, and physical properties of the pile is described. The system includes an exterior first reactor, a customized pressurized treatment fluid, then transports this fluid to one or more drilled well casings, a pipe, isolation mechanisms, and a control valve(s). The drilled well casing is positioned substantially vertically within a heap or a pile with a variety of well depths and may be installed with a variety of drilling technologies using a variety of materials selected for the drill casing. Additionally, the drilled well casing includes an open top, an open or closed bottom, and at least one perforation zone having perforations along a vertical section of the drilled well casing. Additional wells may be installed with a closed bottom to facilitate well installation using other well installation technology. The pipe is positioned within the drilled well casing and the pipe is configured to receive the pressurized treatment fluid which create a second internal reactor or zone in the heap or pile. This zone dimensions, size, shape, volume, and pressure profile is controlled by the customized pressurized treatment fluid's quantity, flow and mass controls, thus controlling the mass of material in the heap or pile impacted by the customized treatment fluid. The pressure profile of the injected fluid in the targeted zone has a maximum at the casing perforations and transports that pressure generally by near horizontal rechanneled pathways outward until the summation of the material's permeability allows fluid leak-off upward and downward due to gravity until an equilibrium is reached. This equilibrium is unique to the physical properties of the material in the zone.
Embodiments discussed herein relate to systems and methods for improving the H2O I/E, as further described below, in heaps and piles. The systems and methods described herein recover a target material, alter the biological, chemical, biochemical, microbiological, and/or physical properties of the material, by using a customized pressurized treatment fluidization process. The customized pressurized treatment fluidization process or method may operate independently of other systems, methods, and/or processes. However, the customized pressurized treatment fluidization also may be used in conjunction with other systems, methods, and/or processes. For example, the customized pressurized treatment fluidization process presented herein may be integrated with other JEX technologies, as further described below. By way of further example and not of limitation, the illustrative embodiments include combining the pressurized treatment fluidization process with systems, methods and apparatuses described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 9,050,545; 9,513,055; 9,752,207; and 10,155,255 each of which is incorporated herein by reference, and which may also be referred to as the “JEX technologies,” and that name the same inventor as the present application.
JEX and HYDRO-JEX® are trademarks used by Differential Engineering Inc. “JEX” or “JEX Technologies” refers to the process of using the new high-pressure injection to stimulate channels in a pile for biological, biochemical, chemical, microbiological, and/or physical change in the pile and metal, chemical, and/or mineral extraction. This process is also referred to herein interchangeably as “I/E” or the “I/E process.” In general, HYDRO-JEX® refers to a process for a particular use of water chemistry in the I/E process, such as illustrated in U.S. Patent Publ. No. US2015/0275327, which is incorporated herein by reference, and is referred to herein as “H2O I/E.” or the “H2O I/E process.” The term “I/E technologies” is used to refer to the I/E processes and H2O I/E processes.
The systems, methods, processes, and/or apparatus presented herein are referred to as “customized pressurized treatment fluidization,” which incorporates customized reagent addition with the pressurized treatment fluidization process. By way of example and not of limitation, customized pressurized treatment fluidization may be integrated with the I/E process, the H2O I/E process, or any combination thereof. More specifically, pressurized treatment fluidization refers to the pressurized treatment fluidization of particles that occurs when fluid is added with sufficient pressure, momentum, and force to move a particle or impart a momentum to a resting particle in a pile. In some of the illustrative embodiments, the systems and methods presented herein employ pressurized treatment fluidization in the interior of a pile or in situ, thereby being confined and contained by the surrounding material of the pile for a designated period of time to minimize the impact on the pile's geostability. By way of example and not of limitation, customized pressurized treatment fluidization may be used to create in the exterior first reactor a custom treatment fluid that is transported and introduced into an identified heap location or zone to create a second, internal in the pile, pressurized reactor to recover the target material, metal and, mineral and/or to alter the biological, biochemical, chemical, microbiological, and/or physical properties of the targeted pile material, resulting in one application of many that being metal and mineral extraction. In other applications to change the biological, biochemical, chemical, microbiological, and/or physical properties of the customized pressure treatment fluid or material in the targeted zone in the pile.
In one illustrative embodiment, the H2O I/E process incorporates the pressurized treatment fluidization process in heaps and piles as described in further detail herein. Customized pressurized treatment fluidization systems, methods and apparatus have shown significantly improved kinetics when compared to normal atmospheric pressure and temperature leaching in a heap or tank for the same size of material. The term customized relates to a process of examining the minerology and composition of the material in the pile and selecting a customized mixture of pressurized treatment fluid that comprises one or more of treatment reagent(s) and/or compounds, a metal treatment reagent(s), a lixiviant, solid reagents, liquid reagents, gasses, anions, bacteria, catalysts, cations, chemicals, elements, enzymes, hazardous materials, inorganic solutions, lixiviants, organic solutions, penalty metals, reagents, scale inhibitors, slurries, solvents (both inorganic and/or organic), and surfactants, reactor feed fluids which could include any combination of: gas or gasses, water, inorganic and/or organic liquids, solutions and slurries, an added biochemical and/or chemical reagents to alter one or more of the treatment fluid such as chemical reactions of: acid-base, catalytic, coagulation, combination, complexation, dissolution, dissociation, displacement, dispersion, enzymatic, growth, hydrolysis, ionization, compound modification, neutralization, pH, precipitation, polymerization, oxidation, reduction, scale inhibition, chemical stability, and substitution. In addition, the reactor can facilitate biological and microbiological processes and reactions including, but not limited to, biosynthesis, catabolism cultivation, dispersion, enzymatic, growth, hydrolysis, inoculation, mixing, mutation, adding nutrients, oxidation-reduction, reproduction, respiration, substrate introduction, synthesis, transformation, transportation, and make or modify products, plus physical changes and processes such as, conductivity, density dispersion, dissolving, drying, filtering, fluidization, mixing, phase, polarity, and volume changes, solubility, geotechnical stability, surface tension, particle surface charge, temperature, viscosity, and wetting. Thus, the reactor systems can create a high pressure biochemical, biological, chemical, catalytical, and/or physical reactor taking feed from one or more components and reagents of customized mixtures of solids, liquid and gasses, bacteria, thereby improving the reaction kinetics, to make a treatment fluid in the first external reactor that is then injected into a heap or pile creating a second internal to the pile reactor.
Fluids introduced into a near vertical cased well by gravity fluid flow do not achieve sufficient head or pressure to substantially fluidize or move particles in a productive manner because the in-situ pile pressure is greater than the pressure imparted by the flow of fluid from a gravity well. Thus, the gravity cased well fluid flow will not achieve a significant near horizontal wetting impact and will not rechannel fluid pathways in the pile. In fact, gravity fluid flow in a cased well often promotes fluid build-up and pooling leading to pile movement, instability, and failure.
In the illustrative embodiments presented herein, the customized pressurized treatment fluidization process described herein can be used with a particular material with significant compounds or specific mineral characteristics, that can be specifically placed in a designed and specified location in a pile with the purpose of using the customized pressurized treatment fluidization systems, methods and apparatus for biochemical, biological, chemical, geotechnical, physical results, treatment or any combination thereof. Thus, the I/E technologies are not limited to mature or existing heaps and the I/E technologies (in combination with pressurized treatment fluidization) can be used to recover a target material and to alter the biological, chemical, biochemical, microbiological, and physical properties of the material of any reactive compound or material in virtually any pile.
Similarly, H2O I/E technologies, like HYDRO-JEX®, can also be used in stages to accommodate various different biological, chemical, biochemical, and/or microbiological pressurized reactions, plus changes in the physical conditions of a pile in time. By altering one or more parameters such as the induced pressure, reagents, lixiviants, pH, Eh, fluid physical and biological, biochemical, chemical, and/or microbiological properties, (i.e., mixtures of solids, liquids, gasses and bacteria, catalysts, scale inhibitors, surfactants and enzymes, plus one or more of pumpable and compressible material) and time for the biochemical, biological, chemical, microbiological reactions, plus physical property changes to occur during rest periods for specific zones in a pile, the material in the pile can then be subjected to separate stage when a host of various conditions to promote one or more of additional selected biological, biochemical, chemical, microbiological products or conditions that favor the desired effect of altering the conditions in a pile, leaching metals, storing material, stabilizing the physical properties and closing a pile.
Without being bound by any particular theory, the promotion of zonal biooxidation of pile material in a second internal reactor over time, followed by altering the pH in the zonal conditions in the heap or pile, for metal dissolution or leaching, allows increased leaching of precious metals, e.g., gold, or optimally leach silver.
Other examples include but are not limited to leaching soluble base metals under a variety of, biological, chemical, microbiological, and/or physical zonal conditions followed in time by altering the biological, chemical, microbiological, and/or physical conditions to leach a target mineral or metals. The reverse may also be utilized, by leaching a first metal then later altering the biological, biochemistry, chemical, and/or microbiological properties of a zone to leach a second metal (or additional metals). In addition, the biological, biochemistry, chemical, and/or microbiological properties of the zones can be altered for long term storage of pumpable and/or compressible material that may be hazardous or for closure of a pile with negligible impact on the environment.
The customized pressurized treatment fluidization processes can be used in combination with the I/E technologies for detailed planning and placement of material on a heap leach pad, pile, dump, landfill, sanitary landfill, and impoundment for one or more reasons: (i) enhance metal and mineral production, ii) target and change the biological/biochemical/chemical/microbiological/physical status and properties, and/or (iii) improve geotechnical stability. Embodiments may be incorporated in existing and mature heaps, piles, dumps, landfills, sanitary landfills, and impoundments, to utilize in situ customized pressurized treatment fluidization of the material to improve reagent utilization, metal, chemical and mineral extraction and selected, designed biological, biochemical, chemical, microbiological reactions, and kinetics. As discussed herein, detailed planning and placing of selected material in heaps, piles, dumps, landfills, sanitary landfills, and impoundments may be used, for example, in various I/E technologies for optimal metal recovery, improved geotechnical stability, adjustment of biological, biochemical, chemical, microbiological or physical properties, and enhanced closure stability. The present disclosure involves the technologies using customized pressurized treatment fluidization in the planned construction and stacking of heaps, piles, dumps, landfills, sanitary landfills, and impoundments, and may include segregated placement of material with specific physical and biological, biochemical, chemical, microbiological properties. Material may be placed at specific locations in a heap, pile, dump, landfill, sanitary landfill, or impoundment in order to incorporate the I/E technologies, e.g., JEX technologies, in addition to using the pressurized treatment fluidization technologies disclosed herein.
Terms used throughout this disclosure include pile, heap, dump, impoundment, landfill (commercial, garbage, governmental, industrial, municipal, sanitary, stacks, stockpiles) or any man-placed mass or material accumulated, stacked, vertical piled or placed for temporary, short term, long term or permanent storage. A pile includes stacked and/or placed material above native soil, with a foundation or visible separation. A heap leach pad is a pile with a liner and a collection system to contain and recover the pregnant solution (fluids containing products of leaching and chemical reactions), below the stacked material for metal, chemical and mineral extraction. Piles, dumps, landfills, sanitary landfills, stacks, and impoundments may have material placed with confining sides to contain solids and liquids, but generally do not have a bottom collection system. An impoundment may be lined and may have a surface solution collection system.
In the illustrative embodiments, one or more wells having a perforated well casing are installed into a pile, or heap, which will be leached, biological, biochemical, chemical, microbiological or physically altered, and impacted. The well includes one or more perforated sections, i.e., zones, which are designed such that during a fluid stimulation, e.g., a customized treatment fluid injection under pressure, the fluid impacts a zone or geometric volume of the heap or pile. The volume of the heap or pile affected by the fluid depends upon fluid pressure, volume, and location of the zone isolation mechanisms.
In embodiments, a customized treatment fluid containing one or more formulated mixtures of one or more solids, liquids, gases, anions, bacteria, catalysts, cations, chemicals, elements, enzymes, hazardous materials, inorganic solutions, lixiviants, organic solutions, penalty metals, reagents, scale inhibitors, slurries, solvents (both inorganic and/or organic), surfactants, water, and/or inorganic and organic liquids may be delivered into the cased near vertical well through one or more conduits or pipes and may include meteoric water traveling through the pile to fit the pile treatment application. The customized treatment fluid may thereafter be screened, pressurized, mixed in the first exterior reactor and delivered, for example by being introduced under pressure required for delivery of the fluid through a perforated well, deep into a heap leach pad or pile to create a second internal reactor in the targeted material or zone to promote one or more of the following processes: leach, re-leach, promote select biological, biochemical, chemical, microbiological reactions, and/or to physically change the zone with augmented reaction kinetics by incorporating customized pressurized treatment fluidization to alter and/or change the biological, biochemical, chemical, microbiological, and/or physical properties, and/or to dry, wet, and/or rinse extracted components of interest (such as metals for recovery), and/or to promote long term pile physical, geotechnical, biological, biochemical, chemical, microbiological, and/or physical characteristics. The high-pressure delivery method may open or stimulate new fluid pathways or channels by fluidizing and moving the particles in the pile, thereby creating new channels, and allowing fluids to interface with the target zone for treatment under pressure. The process does not involve hydraulic fracturing of the material but relies upon pressurized treatment fluid rechanneling through void spaces in the stacked material. The system may include a mobile apparatus (e.g., a mobile trailer or skid) installed near or at the vicinity of the injection well.
In the main illustrative embodiment, the H2O I/E process incorporates the customized pressurized treatment fluidization process in heaps and piles as described in further detail herein. Upon examination of the mineralogical, physical, biological, microbiological, biochemical, and/or chemical properties of the material in the pile, plus identifying the desired biological, biochemical, microbiological, physical, and/or chemical reactions to take place in each targeted zone in the pile, a customized treatment fluid is designed to make up the pressurized fluid. These customized, formulated reagents are added or metered into the H2O I/E process and mixed under pressure transforming the reagents by one or more biological, biochemical, chemical, microbiological, and/or physical process to make a new treatment solution or customized pressurized treatment fluid in the first external reactor that is delivered through a perforated well, deep into a heap leach pad or pile. Thus this system comprises a high pressure biochemical, biological, chemical, catalytical, microbiological, and/or physical process reactor taking feed reagents of one or more formulated mixtures of one or more solids, liquids, gases, anions, bacteria, catalysts, cations, chemicals, elements, enzymes, hazardous materials, inorganic solutions, lixiviants, organic solutions, penalty metals, reagents, scale inhibitors, slurries, solvents (both inorganic and organic), and/or surfactants to accomplish a designated biological, microbiological, biochemical, and/or chemical and physical process under pressure, mixing, and fluidizing, thereby improving the reaction kinetics to make a customized high pressure treatment fluid in the exterior first reactor that is then injected into a heap or pile.
As detailed above, material and particles placed in a pile will have different degrees of permeability, or the ability to allow fluids to pass down by gravity. As additional material is placed or stacked on the pile, the weight above may compress or reduce the permeability of the material below. When the permeability reaches a minimum, air conveyance and water fluids flow downward is reduced or stopped allowing the water fluids to build up or pool. This water fluid reduces inter-particle cohesion and friction within the pile and adds water fluid head and solution weight, thereby imparting reduced resistance to both pile movement and to pile geotechnical stability. As water fluid height increases, the water fluid flows laterally until the water fluid finds an area of improved permeability to then continue downward by gravity. As the volume and velocity of water fluid increases, the water fluid creates channels, just like gullies are formed with intense rainfall. These channels then provide preferential flow for the water fluid. The material below the low permeability area receives little fluid and promotes un-leached, unreacted or under leached and under reacted volumes of material in the pile. The channeled water fluid area receives excessive quantities of water fluid which dilutes the dissolved metal, chemical and minerals reporting to the pregnant solution thereby impacting the physical, biochemical biological, microbiological, and/or chemical properties of the pile's material.
In embodiments, by altering the delivery method in each zone during pressure stimulation and fluidization in the created internal second reactor, new channels and fluid pathways open by moving the particles in the heap or pile, thereby changing, or rechanneling the fluid pathways established by gravity water fluid flow. In addition, directional pressure fluidization opens drainage pathways to create additional channels or rechannels from the open cased well bottom to the bottom of the heap or pile, thereby creating a drain system in-situ in the heap or pile. The drain system may be positioned above a platform, foundation, or terrain contour, e.g., a natural contour of native earth or compacted native earth, with or without a liner, that conducts solution to a location, pond, or low spot above the natural under pile material or native earth, located down gradient from the heap or pile.
Embodiments may incorporate as the exterior first reactor: a trailer or skid apparatus, which may include instruments configured to perform a number of functions including, but not limited to, measurement of flow and pressure of the aqueous solution and other treatment fluids containing of one or more formulated mixtures of one or more solids, liquids, gases, anions, bacteria, catalysts, cations, chemicals, elements, enzymes, hazardous materials, inorganic solutions, lixiviants, organic solutions, penalty metals, reagents, scale inhibitors, slurries, solvents both inorganic and organic, and/or surfactants. The exterior first reactor may further include a high pressure, low volume compressor to inflate isolation mechanisms, a straddle zone isolation mechanism, and a control valve to isolate a specific elevation in the pile for selective treatment, injection, leaching, rinsing and/or recovery of metals, and alteration of the biological, microbiological, biochemical geotechnical, physical, and chemical properties of the material in a heap, pile or zone. Various embodiments may enable any one or more of higher flow rates, higher pressure, and delivery to increased depths, while maintaining and/or enhancing safer operations.
As used herein, the terms “heap,” “heap leach,” “dumps,” “waste dumps,” “landfill,” “sanitary landfills,” “process tails,” “stacks”, “stockpiles,” “process piles,” “garbage dumps,” “refuse,” “deposit,” “rubbish pile,” “commercial, industrial and urban waste,” “lot,” as well as any material placed in a pile for temporary storage or long term storage or disposal (collectively referred to herein as a “pile”), illustrate an application of the systems and methods described herein. The disclosed systems and methods are not limited to use with heaps and for heap leaching. Rather, the embodiments described herein apply to all piles constructed of collected material (whether lined, unlined, or contained) and/or that are open to the environment. As such, the systems and methods described herein may be used to treat any material in storage or disposal in a pile, impoundment, dump, landfill, (industrial, municipal, garbage, sanitary, which are collectively referred to herein as “sanitary”), and used for any type of percolation leaching, dump leaching, crushed leaching, ore pile leaching, run of mine leaching, bio-leaching (aerobic and anaerobic) or any other leaching methods where ore or material is placed on or over an engineered liner with a collection system, or material is placed with or without a foundation, which contains the pile plus fluid or is open to the environment, like process stockpiles, waste dumps, all of which are also collectively referred to herein as a “pile,” regardless of the design of the heap, pile, collection system pipe work, ditches, ponds, liner, drain rock and regardless of whether such piles include ore, waste, refuse, trash, garbage, or other materials.
Pressurization of reagent reactions in the first external reactor 200 changes the solution free energy and increases the chemical interaction resulting in a change of concentration or solvation of the ions, reagents, and compounds with pressure, especially gasses. This physical alteration conducted in the first external reactor 200 process changes the concentration and physical properties of the customized pressurized treatment fluid. Besides customized reagent dissolved concentration, chemical species and solubility changes, there may be physical changes in the viscosity, conductivity, polarity, density, pH, Eh, temperature and surface tension of the pressurized treatment fluid delivered through a perforated well 500 deep into a heap leach pad or pile 700. Thus, this system is a high pressure biochemical, biological, chemical, catalytical, microbiological, and/or physical exterior reactor taking feed reagents of customized mixtures of reagents and compounds thereby increasing the rate of reaction due to pressure to make a custom pressurized treatment fluid.
These following examples are presented, but are not limiting to the 200 reactor process, method and pressurized external reactor system. There are additional formulated mixtures of one or more solids, liquids, and/or gases that have improved reaction kinetics when fluidized and under pressure that can be utilized:
With continued reference
While particular embodiments of stacked heap or piles 700 are shown, it will be appreciated that a heap or pile may be planned, designed, permitted, built, and/or constructed with or without containment 800, such that any material may be stacked, conveyed, dumped, and/or placed upon the foundation, liner, or natural contour 800 to leach 700 extract metals and minerals, chemically, biochemically and/or physically alter the materials, contain the materials, promote geotechnical stability, store and/or isolate the material from the environment, and/or promote sound environmental short and long term storage and deposition by the planned integration or use of the technologies. In an example, fluids containing hazardous elements like mercury and arsenic can be precipitated using reagents added at or before the well head, and selectively stored in the void spaces 602 created by the internal second reactor. These stored elements can be leached in the future by altering the injected reagents via the 200 and 600 reactor process. In another example, ground mill tailings can be stored in the created void spaces, e.g., as pumped slurry, or treated during pumping, with reagents entrained in fluid and deposited in the void space in the heap or pile 700. These stored materials can be further treated in the future with other technologies for long term stabilization, storage and disposal or future recovery if market conditions are favorable.
The cased well 500 via use of the perforated zone 505 isolated by a plug 508 can also be rinsed and re-leached periodically to complete the optimal leach cycle in a heap 700.
As can be appreciated, the methodologies described herein may be implemented by various methods, depending upon applications according to particular examples. For example, such methodologies may be implemented in hardware, firmware, software, or combinations thereof. In a hardware implementation, for example, a processing unit may be implemented within one or more application specific integrated circuits (“ASICs”), digital signal processors (“DSPs”), digital signal processing devices (“DSPDs”), programmable logic devices (“PLDs”), field programmable gate arrays (“FPGAs”), processors, controllers, micro-controllers, microprocessors, electronic devices, other devices units designed to perform the functions described herein, or combinations thereof.
Some portions of the detailed description included herein may be presented in terms of symbolic representations of operations on binary digital signals stored within a memory of a specific apparatus or special purpose computing device or platform. In the context of this particular specification, the term computer or the like includes a general-purpose computer once it is programmed to perform particular operations pursuant to instructions from program software. Algorithmic descriptions or symbolic representations are examples of techniques used by those of ordinary skill in the signal processing or related arts to convey the substance of their work to others skilled in the art. An algorithm is here and is generally considered to be a self-consistent sequence of operations or similar signal processing leading to a desired result. In this context, operations or processing involve physical manipulation of physical quantities. Typically, although not necessarily, such manipulation of quantities may take the form of electrical, pneumatic, or magnetic signals capable of being stored, transferred, combined, compared or otherwise manipulated.
It has proven convenient at times, principally for reasons of common usage, to refer to such signals as bits, data, values, elements, symbols, characters, terms, numbers, numerals, or the like. It should be understood, however, that all of these or similar terms are to be associated with appropriate physical quantities and are merely convenient labels. Unless specifically stated otherwise, as apparent from the discussion herein, it is appreciated that throughout this specification discussions utilizing terms such as “processing,” “computing,” “calculating,” “determining” or the like refer to actions or processes of a specific apparatus, such as a special purpose computer or a similar special purpose electronic computing device. In the context of this specification, therefore, a special purpose computer or a similar special purpose electronic computing device is capable of manipulating or transforming signals, typically represented as physical electronic or magnetic quantities within memories, registers, or other information storage devices, transmission devices, or display devices of the special purpose computer or similar special purpose electronic computing device.
Reference throughout this specification to “for example,” “an example,” and/or “another example” should be considered to mean that the particular features, structures, or characteristics may be combined in one or more examples.
While there has been illustrated and described what are presently considered to be example features, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various other modifications may be made, and equivalents may be substituted, without departing from the disclosed subject matter. Well known process steps and structures have not been described in detail in order to not unnecessarily obscure the other descriptions provided herein. Additionally, many modifications may be made to adapt a particular situation to the teachings of the disclosed subject matter without departing from the central concept described herein. Therefore, it is intended that the disclosed subject matter not be limited to the particular examples disclosed.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2023/063366 | 2/27/2023 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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63268738 | Mar 2022 | US |