Biotechnology and Bioengineering, Vol.48, No.6, 592-600, 1995
Bioleaching of Pyrite by Acidophilic Thermophile Acidianus-Brierleyi
The kinetics of bioleaching of pyrite (FeS2) by the acidophilic thermophilic bacterium Acidianus brierleyi was studied in a well-mixed batch reactor. Experiments were done at 65 degrees C and pH 1.5 on adsorption of A. brierleyi onto pyrite particles, liquid-phase oxidation of ferrous iron by A. brierleyi, and microbial leaching of pyrite. The adsorption of A. brierleyi was a fast process; equilibrium was attained within the first 30 min of exposure to pyrite. The adsorption equilibrium data were well correlated with the Langmuir isotherm. The oxidation of ferrous iron was markedly accelerated in the presence of A. brierleyi, and the growth yield on ferrous iron was determined. The bioleaching of pyrite by A. brierleyi was found to take place with a direct attack by adsorbed cells on the surface of pyrite, the chemical leaching of pyrite by ferric iron being insignificant. Rate data collected under a wide variety of operating variables were analyzed to determine kinetic and stoichiometric parameters for the microbial pyrite leaching. The specific growth rate on pyrite for A. brierleyi was about four times that for the mesophilic bacterium, Thiobacillus ferrooxidans, whereas the growth yields on pyrite for the two microbes were approximately equal to one another in magnitude. A comparison of A. brierleyi with T. ferrooxidans for pyrite leachability demonstrated the thermophile to be much more effective.