Laterite Ores - Nickel and Cobalt Resources for the Future
    
    - Organization:
 - The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
 - Pages:
 - 7
 - File Size:
 - 177 KB
 - Publication Date:
 - Jan 1, 1996
 
Abstract
Although laterite ores already provide a significant proportion of the  world's nickel and cobalt production it is anticipated that they will surpass  sulphide ores as a source of nickel in the next century. The most recent period of greenfield nickel project construction was  during the 1970s when it was notable that all of the eight new plants were  based on treating laterite ores. This was because of the relatively large  selection of available high grade laterite ore deposits amenable to cheap  open cast mining and a paucity of high grade sulphide ore prospect  alternatives. Of the three processing options for treating laterite ores: 1. smelting for the lower horizon saprolite ore,  2. ammonia; and 3. acid leach for the upper horizon limonite ore, smelting currently accounts for about 80 per cent of nickel production. In  the future, as saprolite ore grades decline because of relatively high  exploitation rates, the incentive to process the large untapped reserves of  limonite ore will increase. The high cobalt content of limonite ore also  makes it ideally suited to processing by a hydrometallurgical rather than  smelting route. With only two exceptions, all saprolite smelting operations have a  Class 2 nickel end product (largely ferronickel) and do not produce a  cobalt by-product. As a result of technological advances, the modified  ammonia leach process for limonite and transition ore as undertaken at  Yabulu, now allows the production of pure nickel metal as a Class 1  product, along with significant tonnages of cobalt by-product. The mixed  Ni-Co sulphide intermediate product of the pressure acid leach processing  of limonite ore at Mon is converted to Class 1 nickel and cobalt metal at  Fort Saskatchewan, Canada.
Citation
APA: (1996) Laterite Ores - Nickel and Cobalt Resources for the Future
MLA: Laterite Ores - Nickel and Cobalt Resources for the Future. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1996.