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Cyanide 2

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Key chemical reactions of cyanide; and. Analysing, monitoring and ... Chemical ... Hazing (fireworks, lights, music) Cyanide 31. BEST PRACTICE ENVIRONMENTAL ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cyanide 2


1
Module Topics
  • Properties and uses of cyanide
  • The potential of cyanide to harm people, wildlife
    and the environment
  • Actions required for cyanide management at all
    stages of a mines lifecycle
  • The interactions between cyanide, metals, water
    and the environment

2
Background
  • Cyanide is a widely used industrial chemical
  • Cyanide has been used to extract gold for over
    100 years
  • Cyanide is highly toxic chemical that should be
    used with great care
  • It is important to know the facts about the
    hazards and benefits of using cyanide in mining

3
Some Facts about Cyanide
  • The cyanide ion (CN-) is the active agent in
  • Gold leaching process
  • Poisoning biological systems.
  • Cyanide is naturally occurring in the environment
    at low levels.
  • Significant man-made sources occur in
  • Emissions from iron and steel production
  • Coal burning, vehicle exhausts and petroleum
    refineries.

4
Cyanide and Mining
  • Cyanide is the preferred leaching reagent for
    extracting gold in mining.
  • Mines should aim to use as little cyanide as
    possible to minimise environmental effects,
    maximise worker safety and reduce costs.
  • Cyanide, unless it is captured and recycled, can
    be wasted and may ultimately find its way into
    the environment from tailings dams.

5
Basic Principles of Best Practice in Cyanide
Management
  • Mines that adopt best practice cyanide management
    gain many benefits
  • Improved occupational health and safety
    performance
  • Better relationships with the public and
    regulators
  • Improved economic and environmental performance
  • Reduced risks and liabilities
  • Easier access to capital and lower insurance
    costs.

6
The Ten Commandments of Best Practice Cyanide
Management
1. Risk assessment and planning 2. Cyanide
management strategy 3. Management training 4.
Establish well-defined responsibilities 5. Safe
procedures for cyanide handling
7
The Ten Commandments of Best Practice Cyanide
Management
6. Cyanide and water management plans 7.
Options for reuse, recycling and disposal 8.
Regular cyanide audits 9. Environment and
health monitoring programs 10. Emergency
response procedure
8
Cyanide in Gold Extraction
  • The role of cyanide in a mining operation must be
    well understood and defined. Factors include
  • Types of cyanide
  • Key chemical reactions of cyanide and
  • Analysing, monitoring and reporting.

9
Types and Names of Cyanide Complexes
  • There is such variety of cyanide complexes that
    it is often difficult to compare results of
    toxicological and environmental investigations
  • Free cyanide
  • Titratable cyanide
  • Simple cyanides
  • Complex cyanides
  • Total cyanide
  • Weak acid dissociable cyanide (WAD)
  • Cyanide amenable to chlorination (CATC)

10
Key Chemical Reactions
  • Understanding the chemistry of cyanide helps to
    predict its behaviour in the environment
  • Extracting gold
  • Recycling or disposing of cyanide
  • Natural degradation by volatilisation
  • Natural degradation by oxidation

11
Using Chemistry to Minimise Risks
  • Minimising risks
  • Metal ion complexes
  • Precipitation reactions
  • Reactions with sulphur containing compounds
  • Photodecomposition reactions with
    hexacyanoferrate (II) and (III)
  • Adsorption reactions

12
Analysing and Reporting Cyanide
1. Problem definition 2. Sampling 3. Sample
preservation 4. Sample treatment
5. Standards 6. Measurement 7. Compliance
and reporting 8. Documentation
13
Cyanide Health and Hygiene in the Workplace
  • Safety for workers and responsible use of cyanide
    in mining are closely related
  • Understanding cyanide poisoning helps to
    implement health and hygiene practices in the
    workplace
  • Protecting workers will also help to protect the
    environment

14
Cyanide Poisoning
  • Cyanide is toxic to humans and animals
  • Cyanide poisoning can cause death
  • Cyanide can be breathed in, swallowed or absorbed
    through the skin
  • Most safety procedures aim to prevent cyanide
    coming into contact with the human body

15
General Safety Issues PACE-IT for Safety
Policy Accident investigation Communication Emerge
ncy readiness Inspections Training
16
Transport
  • Mine operators should develop an emergency
    procedure for cyanide spillage during transport
  • Mine operators should work with the manufacturer
    and transport companies on emergency planning

17
Storage
  • How cyanide is stored depends on the form used
    (solid or liquid)
  • Important aspects of storage facilities are
  • Adequate ventilation and protection from water
  • Store away from corrosive, acidic and explosive
    materials
  • Security
  • Bunding to contain accidental spills

18
Handling and Emergency Procedures
  • Hazardous operations include
  • Opening storage containers
  • Dissolving sodium cyanide pellets and
  • Cleaning up cyanide spills
  • Operators handling cyanide should wear protective
    clothing and work in pairs
  • Emergency response procedures should be practiced
    regularly

19
Protective Gear and Hygiene
  • Working with cyanide demands a culture of
    cleanliness
  • Wash after working with cyanide
  • Use protective gear when working with cyanide
  • Respirators, gloves, overalls, waterproof boots

20
Monitoring the Working Environment
  • An air monitoring and sampling program can help
    protect workers
  • Samples should
  • Be representative of worker exposure
  • Be collected and analysed by an approved method
    and
  • Not be tampered with
  • Continuous sampling gives fast results and more
    time for action in an emergency

21
Risk Assessment
  • Best practice means identifying, planning and
    training for contingencies
  • Workers and emergency services must be able to
    react efficiently and effectively in an emergency

22
Minimising Environmental Impacts
  • Use the minimum amounts of cyanide required
  • Dispose of cyanide in ways to minimise or
    eliminate environmental impacts
  • Monitor all operations, discharges and the
    environment
  • Conduct regular cyanide audits

23
Cyanide Balance
  • Similar to a water balance
  • The balance between uptake and loss of cyanide
    from the environment
  • The collection of baseline data during mine
    planning will help identify problems and find
    solutions. Key factors include
  • The ore composition
  • Local meteorology

24
Cyanide Treatment and Reuse
  • The ways in which cyanide concentrations in
    tailings ponds can be reduced include
  • Natural degradation
  • Enhanced natural degradation processes
  • Chemical, physical or biological methods
  • Recovery or recycling

25
Natural Processes
  • Main processes
  • Dissociation of metal cyanide complexes
  • Volatilisation of cyanide as hydrogen cyanide gas
  • Other processes
  • Hydrolysis
  • Photodegradation
  • Chemical and bacteriological oxidation
  • Precipitation as metal complexes

26
Enhancing Natural Losses
  • Some simple procedures can increase the speed of
    natural degradation
  • Aeration
  • Mixing
  • Use of shallow pond with large surface area
    increases the contact with CO2 in air and lowers
    pH and so increases volatilisation

27
Chemical, Physical and Biological Interactions
  • Methods to detoxify residual cyanide
  • - Degussa peroxide process
  • - Caros acid
  • Inco sulphur dioxide/air process
  • Oxidative chlorination
  • Biodegradation

28
Recovery or Recycling
  • Free and WAD cyanide can be recovered using
    various non-oxidative processes
  • Two of these processes rely on reducing pH to
    release HCN
  • AVR (acidification-volatilisation-absorption)
  • CYANISORB

29
Protecting Wildlife and Livestock
  • Ensure cyanide levels in the tailings dams are as
    low as practicable
  • Prevent access or scare away wildlife using
    methods including
  • Fencing
  • Floating balls
  • Netting
  • Hazing (fireworks, lights, music)

30
Spillage and Unintended Process Losses
  • Response to a spill depends on
  • The physical form (solid or liquid) and the
    amount of cyanide lost
  • The size and area of the incident
  • The response time - how quickly the incident is
    noticed
  • How accessible the spill is - underground or on
    the surface
  • The environment involved - land or water

31
Mine Closure and Rehabilitation
  • After closure a mine needs to be rehabilitated
    for future use
  • Include cyanide management in planning for mine
    closure
  • Heap leach pads and mine tailings become more
    acidic as they age
  • WAD cyanide in heap leach pads and tailings will
    dissociate and release cyanide into the
    environment

32
Monitoring Cyanide in the Environment
  • Monitoring cyanide is an essential part of best
    practice environmental management
  • Monitoring should include
  • Baseline information before operations begin
  • Water levels and water quality in drinking water,
    process ponds and tailings dams
  • Fauna
  • Dust generation
  • Rehabilitation progress

33
Conclusion
  • Sound and systematic systems are needed for
  • Cyanide analysis
  • Understanding and predicting the environmental
    chemistry and fate of cyanide
  • Cyanide removal processes
  • Education and communication programs for better
    understanding between mine operators, regulators
    and the community

34
Benefits of Implementing Best Practice
  • Economic and environmental performance in mining
    are inextricably linked.
  • The mining industry is judged by the community on
    environmental performance
  • Implementing best practice is to the advantage of
    the mining industry
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