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Bioleaching/Biocorrosion Metals/Biomining Lisa Smith Marian Cummins Deborah Mc Auliffe • Metal Contamination of soil environments and the assessment of its potential risk to terrestrial environments and human health is one of the most challenging tasks confronting scientists today. • Challenge for mining companies – Service-no long term impact on environment • Increasing interest in microbial approaches for recovery of base and precious metals Biomining • Use of microorganisms – Ores of high quality rapidly being depleted – Environmentally friendly alternative Biomining • Naturally existing microorganisms leach and oxidate 1. Bioleaching 2. Biooxidation • Bioleaching – Extraction of metals with the use of microorganisms • Biooxidation – Microorganisms make metal ready for extraction General Properties • Chemolithotrophic - “ rock eating” • Autotrophic • Acidophilic ( acid loving) • Use oxygen as the preferred electron acceptor Specific Microorganisms Most common: • Thiobacillus ferrooxidans • Thiobacillus thiooxidans Thiobacillus ferrooxidans • • • • • Rod shaped Relatively quick growing Gram negative Strictly aerobic Aerobic conditions uses Fe2+ or reduced S (S2-) as electron acceptor • Anoxic conditions use Fe3+ as electron acceptor • Mod. Thermophilic, temperatures of 20-35 degree C and pH of 2.0 Thiobacillus thioxidans • Very similar to T. ferrooxidans • Can’t oxidise Fe3+ The Process • 2 Methods- Direct and indirect • Direct- enzymatic attack and occurs at the cell membrane • Indirect- bacteria produce Fe3+ ( ferric iron) by oxidizing Fe2+ (ferrous iron) • Fe3+ is a powerful oxidizing agent that reacts with the metals and so produces Fe2+ in a continuous cycle. Copper Process • 25% Copper production is recovered by biomining • MS + 2O2 MSO4 • Metal sulphide is insoluble and metal sulphate is usually water soluble • Cu ore contains CuS and CuFeS2 • T. ferrooxidans brings about both direct and indirect oxidation of CuS via the generation of (Fe3+) ferric iron from (Fe2+) ferrous sulphate • Cu is recovered by solvent extraction or by using scrap iron where the iron replaces the Cu • CuSO4 + Fe Cu + FeSO4 Other Application of Biomining • • • • • • • Gold Due to depletions by the 1980’s Dependent on lower grade ore Gold is encased in the sulphide minerals T. ferrooxidans Fairview mine in S. Africa Recovery rate of 70% to 95% Cont’d • • • • Phosphates industry 2nd largest agriculture chemical 5.5 million tons/ year in the US Traditional method was burning at high temperatures (solid phosphorus) or with H2 SO4(phosphoric acid and gypsum) • Pseudomonas cepacia E37 and Erwinia herbicola • Glucose---- gluconic and 2 ketogluconic acid • Environmentally friendly as no Hs SO4 required and it occurs at room temperature. Case Studies + Economics of Biomining Microbes ‘TO TACKLE MINE WASTE’ • Scientists are using microbes to clean up the problem of corrosive acid pollution left over as mining waste • Some of the microbes being used were found in America, Wales and the Caribbean island • By discovering microbes which can survive in this environment, will help address serious environmental hazards at abandoned mines and soil heaps Industrial Biotechnology Biomining • Commercial Capabilities • Underpinning Existing Capabilities • Emerging Capabilities • Institutional Capabilities • Knowledge / Skills Chile Biomining Program • Worlds first biggest producer of Copper • In 1971 copper mines were nationalized • But in 1990 Chile returned to democracy • Started in 1990 with target @2.5m tons for the year 2000 • This Figure was superseded in 1995 and production exceeded 5m tons / late 1990’s Economic Study of the Canadian Biotechnology • Canadian environmental & industrial biotechnology firms • Microorganisms in applications such as bioremediation leaching, energy production • Canadian Stakeholders with; U.S, European, Japanese environmental regulators Biomining “There’s GOLD in them thar’ Plants!” • Gold rush miners might have been better off using plants to find gold rather than panning streams for precious metal • Early prospectors in Europe used certain weeds as indicator plants that signaled the presence of metal ore Remediation • Response to human health effects • Response to environmental effects • Redevelopment Bioremediation • Destroys or renders harmless various contaminants using microbial activity • Bioremediation of metal-contaminated soil – Soil Flushing – Soil Washing – Phytostabilization – Phytoremediation Phytostabilization • Immobilization of a contaminant in soil through – Absorption & Accumulation – Adsorption – Precipitation • Also use of plant & plant root to prevent contaminant migration • Soil is then farmed to improve growth and reduce mobility and toxicity of contaminant Phytoremediation • Use of plants to remove contaminants from soil • Certain plant species-metal hyperaccumulators – extract metals, concentrate them in their leaves • Prevent recontamination-plants harvested • Leaves accumulate metals and are harvested • Roots take up metals from contaminated soil and transport to the stem, leaves Biomining +Carried out insitu +Less energy input +No toxic/noxious gases produced +No noise or dust problems +Process is self generating +Large or small scale operations +Wide variety of metals (Cu, Ag, Pb, Au, Zn) +Work on low grade ores -Slow process Traditional extraction causes environmental problems and degradation, biomining offers an environmentally friendly alternative!!!!!!