Minerals Engineering, Vol.125, 66-74, 2018
Kinetic study of chalcopyrite dissolution with iron(III) chloride in methanesulfonic acid
The suitability of methanesulfonic acid as a copper lixiviant with ferric chloride as an oxidant was studied by analysing the leaching kinetics and by characterising solid residues from leach tests on a chalcopyrite-rich ore sample. The effects of temperature, initial acidity, ferric-ion concentration and particle size were determined. The leach kinetics were dependent on the temperature and particle size, whereas the acid and ferric concentrations had a minimal impact on the leaching rate within the ranges studied. Although a sulfur layer formed on the solid residue, the reaction mechanism could be modeled with the shrinking-core model with surface chemical-reaction control, which implies that lixiviant flow through the sulfur layer did not control the reaction rate. The apparent activation energy was 101 kJ mol(-1) as calculated by the Arrhenius and 'time-to-a-given-fraction' methods. The activation parameters of the reaction were an enthalpy (Delta H++) of 99.4 kJ mol(-1) , and an entropy (Delta S++) of -197 J mol(-1) K-1 as calculated by using transition state theory and the Eyring equation.