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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, August 1999, p. 3588-3593, Vol. 65, No. 8
Department of Bio-Science, Central Research
Institute of Electric Power Industry, 1646 Abiko, Abiko City,
Chiba, Japan
Received 2 March 1999/Accepted 20 May 1999
Oxidative leaching of metals by Thiobacillus
ferrooxidans has proven useful in mineral processing. Here, we
report on a new use for T. ferrooxidans, in which bacterial
adhesion is used to remove pyrite from mixtures of sulfide minerals
during flotation. Under control conditions, the floatabilities of five
sulfide minerals tested (pyrite, chalcocite, molybdenite, millerite,
and galena) ranged from 90 to 99%. Upon addition of T. ferrooxidans, the floatability of pyrite was significantly
suppressed to less than 20%. In contrast, addition of the bacterium
had little effect on the floatabilities of the other minerals, even
when they were present in relatively large quantities: their
floatabilities remained in the range of 81 to 98%. T. ferrooxidans thus appears to selectively suppress pyrite
floatability. As a consequence, 77 to 95% of pyrite was removed from
mineral mixtures while 72 to 100% of nonpyrite sulfide minerals was
recovered. The suppression of pyrite floatability was caused by
bacterial adhesion to pyrite surfaces. When normalized to the mineral
surface area, the number of cells adhering to pyrite was significantly
larger than the number adhering to other minerals. These results
suggest that flotation with T. ferrooxidans may provide a
novel approach to mineral processing in which the biological functions
involved in cell adhesion play a key role in the separation of minerals.
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Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
A Novel Mineral Flotation Process Using
Thiobacillus ferrooxidans
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Central Research
Institute of Electric Power Industry, 1646 Abiko, Abiko City, Chiba, Japan. Phone: 81-471-82-1181. Fax: 81-471-83-3347. E-mail:
ohmura{at}criepi.denken.or.jp.
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