Your Gold Mine Is Losing Gold And Your Carbon Supplier Might Be Why

Industry Insights · Gold Recovery Your Gold Mine Is Losing Gold And Your Carbon Supplier Might Be Why Most operations focus on ore grades and extraction tonnage. But a poorly…

Tuesday, 16 Jun 2026

Your Gold Mine Is Losing Gold And Your Carbon Supplier Might Be Why

Industry Insights · Gold Recovery

Your Gold Mine Is Losing Gold And Your Carbon Supplier Might Be Why

Most operations focus on ore grades and extraction tonnage. But a poorly chosen activated carbon can quietly drain your recovery yield every single shift. Here is what procurement and operations teams need to know.

FM
First Molecule Insights Team
Specialty Chemicals & Industrial Sourcing

June 2025  ·  8 min read

Imagine running a gold processing operation where your ore grades are healthy, your equipment is maintained, and your team is hitting targets yet your gold recovery numbers keep falling short. Month after month, you are leaving value on the table, and you cannot identify where the losses are coming from.

In our experience working with gold mining operations across Africa, the Middle East, and Asia, this scenario is far more common than most procurement leaders realise. And in a significant number of cases, the culprit is not the ore body, the reagents, or the mill throughput.

It is the activated carbon.

The real cost of poor activated carbon is not on the invoice. It is the gold yield you never recovered and it compounds with every tonne you process.

The Invisible Performance Problem

In gold extraction using Carbon-in-Leach (CIL) or Carbon-in-Pulp (CIP) circuits, activated carbon is the workhorse that adsorbs gold from the cyanide leach solution. Its performance determines how much gold you capture and how much slips through. Yet in procurement decisions, activated carbon is frequently evaluated on a single metric: price per tonne. That is understandable in an environment of tight margins and budget pressure, but it is also a costly oversimplification. A 1% reduction in gold adsorption efficiency, sustained across a mid-sized operation processing 2,000 tonnes of ore per day, can translate into hundreds of thousands of dollars in lost revenue annually. In larger operations, the figure runs into millions. The carbon did not fail dramatically. It simply underperformed quietly, consistently, expensively.

1%
Adsorption efficiency drop that triggers significant gold loss
3-5×
Faster carbon degradation from low hardness grades
$100K+
Potential annual yield loss at a mid-sized operation

What Actually Determines Carbon Performance

Activated carbon is not a commodity in the traditional sense. Different grades, production methods, and source materials produce carbon with substantially different performance characteristics. For gold recovery specifically, two parameters matter above all others.

Iodine Value

Iodine value measures the carbon’s internal surface area and porosity in simple terms, how much of the carbon’s structure is available to adsorb gold from solution. Higher iodine values (typically above 900 mg/g for gold-grade carbon) indicate greater adsorptive capacity. This is the figure most suppliers lead with, and it matters but it is only half the picture.

Hardness Number

Hardness number measures the carbon’s physical durability under the mechanical stress of a processing circuit. CIL and CIP operations subject activated carbon to continuous agitation, pumping, screening, and thermal regeneration cycles. Carbon that is soft or brittle breaks down into fine particles called carbon fines that pass through screens, carry gold with them, and exit the circuit as tailings.

Carbon with a hardness number below 95% degrades significantly faster under operational conditions. The adsorption capacity you tested in the lab disappears in the plant not because the carbon was misrepresented, but because hardness was never part of the procurement conversation.

Parameter What it measures Minimum recommended Risk if ignored
Iodine Value Surface area & adsorptive capacity ≥ 900 mg/g Low gold uptake
Hardness Number Mechanical durability under stress ≥ 95% Carbon fines & gold loss
Moisture Content Water weight vs. net carbon mass ≤ 5% Paying for water, not carbon
Ash Content Inorganic residue affecting purity ≤ 5% Circuit interference
Particle Size Uniformity of granule sizing Matched to circuit screens Screen blinding or bypass

Why Lab Specs and Plant Reality Diverge

Technical data sheets are produced under controlled laboratory conditions standardised temperature, pH, and contact time. Your gold recovery circuit operates under very different conditions: varying slurry pH, fluctuating temperatures, mechanical abrasion, and continuous regeneration cycles that progressively stress the carbon structure.

This is why a small-batch pilot evaluation matters so much before committing to large-volume procurement. A 30-day operational pilot comparing two carbon grades side-by-side measuring gold loading, carbon inventory attrition, and fines generation will reveal performance differences that a data sheet cannot predict.

The cost of running a pilot is negligible against the cost of operating for six months with underperforming carbon on a long-term supply contract.

⚗️
Request hardness number alongside iodine value always

Any supplier that provides only iodine value on their spec sheet is presenting an incomplete picture. Insist on both, in writing, for every batch.

🔬
Run a pilot before signing a volume commitment

30 to 60 days of parallel operation under your actual circuit conditions is the only reliable test. Lab performance and plant performance are different things.

🤝
Evaluate technical support depth, not just price

A supplier who can diagnose an adsorption drop at short notice is worth significantly more than the cheapest price per tonne.

 

Procurement Checklist

Before approving any activated carbon supplier for gold recovery

  • 1Obtain a full Certificate of Analysis covering iodine value, hardness number, moisture content, ash content, and particle size distribution for the specific batch you will receive.
  • 2Request third-party laboratory verification, or confirm the supplier’s in-house testing methodology and calibration records.
  • 3Conduct a small-batch operational pilot under your circuit’s real conditions before committing to volume supply agreements
  • 4Assess the supplier’s technical team: Can they visit your site? Do they understand elution and regeneration cycles? Have they worked with operations of similar scale?
  • 5Clarify supply continuity: batch-to-batch consistency is as important as individual batch quality. Request quality records across multiple production runs.

The Difference Between a Supplier and a Partner

Across the mining operations we work with in sub-Saharan Africa, East Africa, the Middle East, and Southeast Asia, the distinction that consistently separates high-performing circuits from underperforming ones is not the grade of equipment or the size of the ore body. It is the quality of the sourcing relationships.

Operations that treat activated carbon as a commodity purchase evaluated on price alone tend to experience gradual, hard-to-diagnose yield erosion that only becomes visible in a quarterly recovery review.

Operations that approach chemical sourcing as a long-term technical partnership where the supplier understands the circuit, provides consistent batch quality, and can respond to performance questions with process knowledge rather than sales language tend to maintain recovery rates that compound meaningfully over time.

At First Molecule, our work across specialty chemicals, pharmaceutical intermediates, fine chemicals, and industrial chemical sourcing is grounded in this belief: the value we provide is not in the product itself, but in the depth of understanding we bring to how that product is used.

Procurement leaders who ask deeper questions of their suppliers about hardness, batch consistency, and technical support are building a competitive advantage that shows up in the recovery numbers every single month.

The Bottom Line

Gold recovery performance is multi-variable. But among the variables procurement teams can directly control, the quality and consistency of activated carbon selection is one of the highest-leverage decisions you make.

The questions to ask are straightforward: What is the hardness number? Can I run a pilot? What happens when there is a problem?

The answers will tell you whether you are looking at a commodity transaction or a genuine partnership and the difference between the two will show up in your recovery data within weeks.

FM
First Molecule Insights Team
Specialty Chemicals · Pharmaceutical Intermediates · Industrial Chemical Sourcing

First Molecule is a specialty chemicals and pharmaceutical intermediates supplier operating across Africa, the Middle East, and Asia. Our insights are drawn from direct experience working alongside procurement leaders, operations managers, and process engineers in gold mining, pharmaceuticals, and industrial manufacturing.

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