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Otjikoto highlights FLSmidth’s gold extraction capabilities

Posted on 3 Jun 2014

FLSmidth’s capabilities in gold extraction will be showcased with the supply of equipment to B2Gold’s Otjikoto gold project. FLSmidth says it is the only company in Africa capable of providing a complete end-to-end gold extraction solution drawn from in-house technology. This knowhow and equipment derives from FLSmidth’s Summit Valley range of modular plants and equipment for the extraction of gold and silver. The Summit Valley offering includes the industry’s highest capacity EW cell used in precious metals recovery.

The Otjikoto gold project is located 300 km north of Windhoek, Namibia, between the towns of Otjiwarongo and Otavi, and will be the country’s second and biggest gold mine when it enters production before year end. The current mine plan is based on probable mineral reserves of 29.4 Mt to be mined over an initial 12-year period.

The order was placed with FLSmidth in the second quarter of 2013 and comprises 14 Krebs gMAX cyclones; four KC-QS48 Knelson concentrators reporting to a ConSep Acacia CS8000 intense cyanidation reactor; two 20 m diameter thickeners (one pre-leach and one tailings) with a bolted tank design; one carbon fines and one sludge filter and four EW cells. FLSmidth will provide installation and commissioning supervision on-site, as well as post commissioning support from its Johannesburg operations.

FLSmidth’s gMAX cyclones focus on minimising turbulence while maximising tangential velocity, significantly advancing cyclone performance. To achieve these two design criteria, the gMAX incorporates performance enhancing improvements to the inlet head, cylinder section, cones and apex. The company’s Quantum Series (QS) Knelson batch concentrator is highly configurable and uses a rotating assembly incorporating the latest design in concentrate cone technology and advancements in the upper and lower frame.

“The low-grade Otjikoto ore contains significant gravity gold that can occur in relatively large nuggets, so maximum gravity effort is planned for recovery, with 100% of ball mill circulating load treated by gravity,” Dave Capstick, FLSmidth Business Development Manager, says.

The Krebs cyclones, Knelson concentrators and Acacia leach reactor were shipped to the mine site in October last year followed by the filters, with fabrication of the thickeners complete and trial assembly underway. The EW cells and standby units are about to be shipped.