Minerals Engineering, Vol.122, 84-90, 2018
Removal of arsenic from gold cyanidation process waters by use of cerium-based magnetic adsorbents
Cerium-based magnetic adsorbents (referred to as Fe3O4@CeO2/(OH)(x)) were synthesised via a simple chemical precipitation method. Scanning electron microscopy - energy dispersive spectrometry (SEM-EDS) showed that the synthesised particles had an average size of approximately 300 mn. The particles consisted of crystalline magnetite cores coated with poorly ordered cerium oxide as identified by their X-ray diffraction (XRD) patterns. A saturation magnetization of approximately 40 emu/g was determined by a superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID), making Fe3O4@CeO2/(OH)(x) easy to separate magnetically. The Brunauer-EmmettTeller (BET) specific surface area of the final product was approximately 91.38 +/- 1.47 m(2)/g. Systematic adsorption tests showed that both As(III) and As(V) could be rapidly removed by Fe3O4@CeO2/(OH)(x) with the Langmuir maximum adsorption capacities of 79.1 mg/g for As(III) and 25.5 mg/g for As(V) at a pH value of 9, in arsenic-only solutions. A simultaneous adsorption of 51.2 mg/g for As(III) and As(V) was obtained in simulated process waters from gold cyanidation. 1.0 mol/L NaOH solution was used as a regenerant to investigate the regeneration and reuse of Fe3O4@CeO2/(OH)(x), and over 60% of its initial adsorption capacity was retained after five consecutive adsorption-desorption cycles. Therefore, the readily synthesised Fe3O4@CeO2/(OH)(x) micro-particles, with their high degree of magnetic separability and exceptional arsenic adsorption capacity, can be considered a promising arsenic scavenger in certain industrial applications.