The Aachen Reactor, a highly efficient mass transfer device, is now firmly established as a key processing step in many gold operations with many millions of ounces of gold recovered annually via the reactor. It is the key technology to a number of innovative processes including the Leachox refractory gold process.
The development of the Maelgwyn Mineral Services (MMS)
Aachen Reactor can be traced back to 1987. Interestingly and separately to
completely opposite parts of the world.
In 1987 Michael Battersby, Co-founder of MMS with Dr Rainer Imhof, had
emigrated from the UK to Australia and was working as metallurgical manager of
a mine management company in the historic mining centre of Kalgoorlie. A part of his work was to provide
metallurgical consultancy to a number of operating gold mines in the area. One of which was the Broad Arrow Gold Mine,
about 40km north of Kalgoorlie. Mike had recruited a young metallurgist – Ivan
Mullany – to be the plant metallurgist at Broad Arrow. A decade later Ivan was
going to be very influential to the success of MMS.
The Broad Arrow Gold Mine was a small Carbon in Pulp
operation that ran for a number of years and then, as reserves were depleted,
it was eventually closed down and the plant dismantled. The process plant was a few hundred metres
from the famous Broad Arrow Tavern. An outback tavern made of corrugated
sheets. Mike and Ivan, with many other mine
workers in the area, used to regularly stop off in the pub after work on the
way back to town for a pie and some refreshment. Mike still has the T-shirt! A bit worn now.
Broad Arrow Tavern T-shirt!
To briefly recap the gold leaching process. To dissolve the gold,
you need cyanide in the presence of oxygen with a high alkaline pH for safety
to avoid the formation of hydrogen cyanide (HCN) poisonous gas. At Broad Arrow
the oxygen came from a supply of compressed air that was blown into the tanks.
The combination of the pulp viscosity and buffering made this quite
inefficient. The dissolved oxygen (DO) levels required in the pulp were only
barely reached and you go visually see the inefficiencies with large air
bubbles rising to the surface and escaping to the atmosphere. So, the talk in
the pub between Mike and Ivan was, occasionally, how could the oxygen
utilisation be improved. It was actually an issue on most gold plants
world-wide.
Around the same time in 1987 in Germany Dr Rainer Imhof was
inventing and developing various pneumatic flotation systems. He had come up with a gas dispersion and
pressure hold-up concept and on the 10th of December 1987 had duly
applied for a German patent on the invention.
Dr Imhof’s gas dispersion and pressure hold up patent.
Mike and Rainer finally met when Rainer came out to
Australia to attend the International Mineral Processing Congress in Sydney in
1993. They got on well and Mike explained what he had been doing and thinking
about with Rainer’s aerators, for gold leaching. Rainer went back to Germany and thought about
the idea. In the meantime, Mike had been in discussions with various industry
leaders in Australia about the concept. One of whom was Rob Dunne. He had
arranged for trials of the flotation aerator to be undertaken at the New
Celebration gold mine and the large Boddington gold mine in Western
Australia. Technically the trials were a
success indicating an increase in DO levels, and increase in gold recovery and
a decrease in cyanide consumption. Some of the work was actually reported in a
technical paper. However, the flotation
aerators used were designed for low wear, batch flotation tests and not
designed for continuous operation and the high wear rigours of gold ore
slurries. A major redesign was required.
Some of the original designed pneumatic flotation aerators.
In 1994 Mike was then asked to move to Germany to head up
the High Pressure Grinding Rolls division of the company. Here he worked a lot
closer with Dr Imhof who was perfecting his new designs of an aerator that
could be used in the gold industry. Mike
had quick success with the HPGR’s, essentially breaking their entry and use
into mainstream metalliferous mining. He then went to the managers of the
company with Dr Imhof’s new designs and a new business concept for the company
in gold processing. However, the company
was not interested. There was a lot of internal company politics going on at
that time and they also could not grasp that the industry was moving away for
turn-key mineral processing plants, that had been their lifeblood for decades,
to EPCM style contracts where engineering companies picked and chose what and
whose equipment would be installed, mainly based on price.
In 1997 Mike decided that the had enough of working for a
large multinational. With Rainer’s new
designs he believed he could develop a business concept that would support a
new company. He resigned, moved to Wales
and on 21st October 1997 registered Maelgwyn Mineral Services Ltd.
The move and start up was a little bit more planned than random. By this time Ivan Mullany was now manager at
the Mines d'Or de Salsigne gold mine in the south of France. Low and behold Salsigne was having the same
old trouble with low dissolved oxygen levels.
Only at Salsigne it was amplified by the presence of sulphides in the
ore that chewed up the various reagents used in gold leaching. As is seen
later, this is a recurring theme globally.
Ivan had been asking for a while for Mike’s previous company to supply
an aerator, as has been said, without success.
On the date of MMS’s registration, it received its first order for an
Aachen Reactor REA200 from Ivan at Salsigne. Ivan Mullany has had a very successful
career with two of the biggest gold mining companies – Barrick Gold Corp and
currently Newmont Gold Corp, where he is Senior Vice-President – Projects.
Mark I Aachen Reactor Assembly
Dissolved Oxygen levels being measured in the tank after the
Aachen Reactor in Salsigne, France
The order from Mines d'Or de Salsigne was quickly followed
by and order from old friends at the Emperor gold mine in Fiji and then from
Kanowna Belle gold mine in Australia.
In the year 2000 Dr Imhof acquired the ownership rights of
his own patents, where he was the inventor, from his previous company. He then
vended them into MMS and joined Mike full-time. This was the catalyst for the
expansion of the use of the reactors.
MMS had set up a subsidiary in South Africa. This company was close to
the market and uses of the reactor, so could get immediate feedback on various
issues. This assisted Dr Imhof to design ever larger units with more efficient
gas dispersion and, crucially, much improved wear characteristics. Some of these developments and inventions
were novel enough to obtain world-wide patent protection for the new designs
and then the various processes developed around the reactor.
There are currently (2020) over eighty Aachen Reactors in
operation world-wide in various processing applications and many more in the pipe-line,
both literally and figuratively so to speak!
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