A new guide to niobium and tantalum has been published by the British Geological Survey (BGS) on its website. These little-known metals have some unique properties which make them essential ingredients in a wide range of products, from mobile phones to artificial hips. As commodity prices rise and access to some raw materials becomes more difficult, a small group of so-called ‘critical metals’ is causing particular concern. Niobium and tantalum are two of the most widely used metals on this critical list. Because of their unique properties and their essential role in the manufacture of steel and electronic capacitors, they are hard to substitute.
Supply concerns surrounding these metals have been heightened because illegal mining of niobium-tantalum ore (sometimes known as ‘coltan’) has been linked to conflict in some parts of Africa.
The newly-published Niobium-Tantalum Commodity Profile from the BGS provides a concise, authoritative and easy to understand guide to the origins, production and trade of these important metals. Andrew Bloodworth, Head of Minerals and Waste at the BGS said: “Our profile on niobium and tantalum is the latest in a much-respected series from the BGS on critical metals, including rare earths, platinum and tungsten. Its publication is timely as it follows the recent release of the report of the House of Commons Science and Technology Committee inquiry into Strategically Important Metals which calls for more understanding of the role of these metals in our economy”.
2. Mineral name Mineral group Formula Nb2O5 (%) Ta2O5 (%)
Columbite Columbite-tantalite (Fe,Mn)(Nb,Ta)2O6 78.72 n.a.
Tantalite Columbite-tantalite (Fe,Mn)(Ta,Nb)2O6 n.a. 86.17
Pyrochlore Pyrochlore (Na,Ca)2Nb2O6(O,OH,F) 75.12 n.a.
Microlite Pyrochlore (Na,Ca)2Ta2O6(O,OH,F) n.a. 83.53
Tapiolite Tapiolite (Fe,Mn) (Ta,Nb)2O6 1.33 83.96
Ixiolite Ixiolite (Ta,Nb,Sn,Mn,Fe)4O8 8.30 68.96
Wodginite Wodginite (Ta,Nb,Sn,Mn,Fe)O2 8.37 69.58
Loparite Perovskite (Ce,La,Na,Ca,Sr)(Ti,Nb)O3 16.15 n.a.
Lueshite Perovskite NaNbO3 81.09 n.a.
Euxenite Euxenite (Y, Ca, Ce, U, Th)(Nb, Ti, Ta)2O6 47.43 22.53
Struverite Rutile (Ti,Ta,Fe)O2 11.32 37.65
Ilmenorutile Rutile Fex(Nb,Ta)2x4Ti1-xO2 27.9 n.a.
Table 2 Selected niobium and tantalum minerals and indicative contents of Nb2O5 and Ta2O5.
Deposits
Niobium and tantalum mineral deposits are most com-
monly associated with igneous rocks3, including granites,
pegmatites4, syenites5 and carbonatites6. Some secondary
Niobium–tantalum
deposits, where niobium- and tantalum-bearing minerals
have been concentrated by weathering and sedimentary
processes, are also known (see Table 3 and Figure 3 at the
end of this section). In general, these secondary deposits
occur in relatively close association with their primary
sources, and so they are not considered separately in the
descriptions below.
Primary Niobium and Tantalum deposits can be divided
into three main types, on the basis of the igneous rocks
with which they are associated (Küster, 2009):
1. Carbonatites and associated rocks
Figure 2 Pyrochlore. Source: Rob Lavinsky (iRocks.com) 2. 2. Alkaline to peralkaline granites and syenites
3. Granites and pegmatites of the LCT family (enriched
ˇ
in lithium (Li), caesium (Cs), tantalum) (Cerný and Ercit,
Other, less common oxides of niobium and tantalum
2005).
include tapiolite, ixiolite, and minerals of the perovskite
group. Niobium and tantalum also substitute for major
Moderately high contents of niobium and tantalum may be
ions in some common oxide groups such as cassiterite,
found in some granites and pegmatites that do not fall into
rutile, and ilmenite. Contents of niobium and tantalum in
the categories given above, but economic examples are
these minerals are rarely high enough to make them of
not known.
economic interest. Similarly, niobium and tantalum occur
as substitutes in a range of silicate minerals, typically
those found in alkaline igneous rocks such as eudialyte 3
Igneous rocks: rocks with a crystalline texture that crystallised from molten
rock (magma).
(Na4(Ca,Ce)2(Fe++,Mn,Y)ZrSi8O22(OH,Cl)2). 4
Pegmatites: very coarse-grained igneous rocks.
5
Syenites: coarse-grained igneous rocks that are composed largely of the
2
Image taken by Rob Lavinsky. Permission to use given by a creative commons potassium- and/or sodium-rich mineral alkali feldspar.
6
licence (accessed 25/03/2011 at www.commons.wikimedia.org). Attribution: Rob Carbonatites: igneous rocks consisting of more than 50 per cent primary
Lavinsky, iRocks.com (http://www.irocks.com/) – CC-BY-SA-3.0. carbonate minerals.
2 www.MineralsUK.com
3. Carbonatites and associated rocks these minerals in the shallow subsurface. Late-stage veins
Carbonatites are igneous rocks that consist of more than and areas of metasomatism, formed through carbohydro-
50 per cent primary carbonate minerals. They are almost thermal activity, are a third potential source of niobium
exclusively found in areas of continental extension and mineralisation.
rifting7, and their source magmas are thought to be derived
directly from the mantle with very little crustal influence. Much of the world’s niobium supply comes from Bra-
Carbonatites are most commonly found as dykes, sills and zil, where the main niobium deposits occur in alkaline
small plugs (less than one kilometre in diameter), more ultramafic-carbonatite complexes of the Late Cretaceous17
rarely occurring as large plutons or as extrusive8 volcanic Alto Paranaiba igneous province, intruded into Neoprotero-
sequences. They rarely occur in isolation, being more zoic18 metasedimentary rocks. The largest currently worked
commonly associated with alkaline9 silicate rocks, either niobium deposit is at Araxá, and is owned and exploited
nepheline syenite and other feldspathoid-bearing10 igneous by the Companhia Brasileira de Metalurgia e Mineraçao
rocks, or mafic11 to ultramafic12 alkaline rocks (Woolley (CBMM). A second major niobium mine, at Catalão, is
and Kjarsgaard, 2008). Many carbonatite bodies are sur- operated by Anglo American. These deposits are hosted
rounded by a metasomatised13 or ‘fenitised’ zone, typically in rather unusual intrusions consisting of carbonatite- and
rich in sodium (Na) and/or potassium (K), formed through phoscorite19-series rocks with no associated syenites. In
alteration of the country rocks by fluids derived from the both deposits, pyrochlore is the main niobium ore mineral.
carbonatite. Some carbonatite bodies are considered to be The Araxá deposit lies within the Barreiro Carbonatite
carbohydrothermal14 — formed from carbon dioxide-rich Complex, a roughly circular intrusion approximately 4.5 kil-
and water-rich fluids rather than magmas. ometre in diameter (Nasraoui and Waerenborgh, 2001),
dominated by dolomite carbonatite with subordinate cal-
Carbonatites are typically enriched in a range of elements, cite carbonatite, glimmerite20 and phoscorite. The central
including the rare earth elements (REE), barium (Ba), part of the intrusion has been weathered under tropical
strontium (Sr), fluorine (F), phosphorus (P), niobium (Nb), conditions to form a thick (>200 metres), lateritic21 cover in
Niobium–tantalum
zirconium (Zr), uranium (U) and thorium (Th). Niobium is which pyrochlore has become concentrated at a reported
preferentially enriched over tantalum in carbon dioxide- mean grade of 2.5 per cent niobium oxide, and which is
rich melts, and so carbonatites do not generally have exploited by open-pit mining. The country rocks to the
high tantalum contents (Möller, 1989). Common niobium- carbonatite have been metasomatised in an aureole22 up
bearing minerals found in carbonatites include members of to 2.5 kilometre wide (Nasraoui and Waerenborgh, 2001).
the perovskite and pyrochlore mineral groups, as well as The main worked deposit at Catalão is in the Catalão I
niobium-rich silicates such as titanite (Mitchell, 2005). alkaline-carbonatite complex, but a similar deposit occurs
in the nearby Catalão II complex. Catalão I is a steep-sid-
In general, bulk rock niobium contents for carbonatite ed, zoned intrusive body with a diameter of approximately
bodies are moderately high (commonly 0.01–0.1 per cent, six kilometres at the surface. It is dominated by glimmerite
rarely up to 1.0 per cent), but not ore-grade. However, (phlogopitite) at the margins of the complex, with sheets
magmatic differentiation15 processes such as crystal set- and plugs of dolomite-carbonatite and phoscorite-series
tling may concentrate niobium-bearing minerals such as rocks that become increasingly common towards the cen-
pyrochlore. Weathering processes16 may also concentrate tre of the complex (Cordeiro et al., 2010). As at Araxá, the
mined deposit is in the weathered lateritic zone above the
7
Continental rifting: the gradual break-up of a continent under extension, as is centre of the complex.
occurring at the present day in East Africa.
8
Extrusive: extrusive volcanic rocks are formed by eruption of magma on to the
Earth’s surface.
9
The largest active niobium mine outside Brazil is the
Alkaline rocks: igneous rocks that are rich in sodium and potassium, and
contain certain characteristic minerals.
Niobec mine in Quebec, Canada, operated by the Iamgold
10
Feldspathoids: a group of light-coloured minerals that have relatively low
silica contents.
11 17
Mafic rock: a rock containing abundant dark-coloured minerals that are rich in Late Cretaceous: a unit of geological time between 99 to 65 million years ago.
18
magnesium and/or iron. Neoproterozoic: a unit of geological time between 1000 to 542 million years
12
Ultramafic: a rock almost entirely made up of dark-coloured minerals that are ago.
19
rich in magnesium and/or iron. Phoscorite: A magnetite, olivine, apatite rock, usually associated with
13
Metasomatised: having undergone metasomatism, chemical alteration of a carbonatites.
20
rock by the action of fluids. Glimmerite: An ultramafic rock consisting almost entirely of mica, either
14
Carbohydrothermal: formed from hot carbon dioxide-rich and water-rich fluids. biotite or phlogopite. Can also be called biotitite or phlogopitite as appropriate.
15 21
Magmatic differentiation: processes by which certain elements or minerals Lateritic: relating to laterite, a residual deposit rich in iron and aluminium
are concentrated either in the crystalline rock or in the residual molten magma. resulting from weathering under tropical conditions.
16 22
Weathering processes: processes by which rocks are altered at the earth’s Aureole: an area around a body of igneous rock in which the host rocks have
surface. been altered by the effects of increased temperature, pressure or fluid flow.
3 www.MineralsUK.com
4. Corporation. This mine lies in the southern part of the well-studied examples from Lueshe (Democratic Republic
Neoproterozoic-age Saint-Honoré carbonatite complex, of Congo), Oka (Quebec, Canada), and Sökli (Finland). The
which has an elliptical shape and is approximately four Lueshe syenite-carbonatite complex, which is Cambrian27
kilometres across at the surface. It consists of a series in age, has a central core of syenite some 800 metres in di-
of crescentic lenses of carbonatite, younging inwards ameter, bordered by a ring dyke of calcite carbonatite and
from calcite carbonatite through dolomite carbonatite to dolomite carbonatite (Nasraoui and Bilal, 2000). Intense
ferrocarbonatite (Belzile, 2009). The carbonatite body is weathering of the carbonatites has formed a laterite hori-
surrounded by a ring of syenites and diorites, and is almost zon which is enriched in pyrochlore, and has been mined
entirely covered by Palaeozoic23 limestones. Pyrochlore for niobium. The Cretaceous28 Oka carbonatite complex is
is the main niobium mineral in the Saint-Honoré com- an elongate pluton, about seven kilometres long, compris-
plex. It is disseminated throughout the carbonatite, but ing carbonatites and feldspathoid-bearing silicate rocks.
is particularly abundant in mineralised lenses that are It includes three separate niobium-mineralised deposits
50–150 metres wide and up to approximately 750 metres containing minerals of the perovskite and pyrochlore
long, with grades of 0.44–0.51 per cent niobium oxide groups (Zurevinski and Mitchell, 2004). The Sökli carbon-
(Belzile, 2009). These mineralised zones occur at depths of atite-phoscorite complex is Devonian29 in age, with an area
over 100 metres beneath the surface, and the Niobec mine of about 20 square kilometres, and comprises metasoma-
is the only underground niobium mine in the world. On the tised ultramafic rocks, carbonatites and phoscorites, with
same structural lineament, the nearby Crevier syenite- abundant pyrochlore in the younger units of the complex
carbonatite complex contains a niobium-tantalum deposit (Lee et al., 2006). The major Bayan Obo rare earth element
which is currently being evaluated. deposit in China, which is also enriched in niobium, is as-
sociated with carbonatite magmatism and may have been
Numerous other carbonatite-hosted niobium deposits formed by the interaction of carbonatite-derived fluids and
are known across the world, but are not currently being sedimentary host rocks (Yang et al., 2009).
exploited. The most significant of these are the Tomtor
Niobium–tantalum
deposit in Siberia, Russia and the Morro dos Seis Lagos Alkaline to peralkaline granites and syenites
deposit in Brazil (Pollard, 1995). The Neoproterozoic- The alkaline igneous rocks are classified, on the basis of
age Tomtor alkaline complex comprises an outer ring of mineralogy, as those rocks containing certain sodium- or
nepheline-syenites, with a central stock24 of carbonatite, potassium-rich minerals (feldspathoids, alkali amphi-
having a surface area of approximately 12 square kilome- boles, or alkali pyroxenes). Peralkaline rocks are a subset
tres (Kravchenko and Pokrovsky, 1995). Pyrochlore is dis- in which the molecular amount of Na2O + K2O exceeds
seminated throughout the carbonatite, but is particularly Al2O330. Alkaline rocks are most commonly found in intra-
concentrated in two ore horizons. The lower ore horizon, plate settings such as zones of continental rifting, but they
which is up to 300 metres thick, represents the weath- may also be formed in post-collisional31 to post-orogenic32
ered and altered top to the carbonatite body, whilst the environments. The most evolved alkaline igneous rocks,
upper ore horizon is a buried placer deposit25 formed in an such as alkali granites and syenites, are characterised
ancient lake, associated with Permian26 sedimentary rocks. by high contents of iron (Fe), fluorine, niobium, zirconium,
The upper ore horizon contains more than 12 per cent rubidium (Rb), uranium, thorium and rare earth elements
niobium (Kravchenko and Pokrovsky, 1995). The Morro dos but low niobium and tantalum (Pollard, 1989, Küster, 2009).
Seis Lagos deposit is poorly known, to the extent that even Mineral deposits in alkaline igneous rocks typically contain
its age is uncertain (Berger et al., 2009), but it is thought to high contents of zirconium, yttrium (Y), niobium and the
represent the largest single niobium deposit in the world rare earth elements, but are less commonly enriched in
with 2897 million tonnes niobium (Pollard, 1995). tantalum.
A total of 58 carbonatite bodies containing niobium and Several factors contribute to the enrichment of High Field
rare earth element mineral deposits have been recorded in Strength Elements33 (HFSE), such as niobium and zirco-
published work (Berger et al., 2009) and other such depos-
its may remain to be found. The smaller deposits include 27
28
Cambrian: a unit of geological time between 542 and 488 million years ago.
Cretaceous: a unit of geological time between 145 and 65 million years ago.
29
Devonian: a unit of geological time between 416 and 359 million years ago.
23 30
Palaeozoic: a unit of geological time between 542 and 251 million years ago. Na2O, K2O and Al2O3: sodium oxide, potassium oxide and aluminium oxide.
24 31
Stock: a small body of igneous rock, emplaced beneath the Earth’s surface, Post-collisional: post-dating the peak of continental collision.
32
usually cylindrical with steep margins. Post-orogenic: post-dating all tectonic processes associated with a continen-
25
Placer deposit: a concentration of heavy minerals transported and deposited tal collision event (orogeny).
33
by rivers and/or coastal processes. High field strength elements: Elements of high valency (able to combine with
26
Permian: a unit of geological time between 299 and 251 million years ago. many other elements to form compounds) that are incompatible (see footnote 34).
4 www.MineralsUK.com
5. nium, in alkaline igneous rocks such as alkaline granites In Russia’s Kola Peninsula, the Devonian-age Lovozero
and syenites. Alkaline magmas are most commonly syenite massif contains layered syenites with layers that
considered to be derived from the enriched sub-continental are rich in eudialyte, loparite and apatite. Loparite has
lithospheric34 mantle, and are enriched in the HFSE from been mined on and off for many years, and the loparite
their formation. The HFSE are incompatible35 and thus concentrates have average grades of eight weight per
they become enriched in the most evolved, granitic and cent niobium oxide and 0.7 weight per cent tantalum oxide
syenitic magmas; in some localities, ore minerals are (Salvi and Williams-Jones, 2005). The Mesoproterozoic-
found disseminated throughout highly evolved granites age Pilanesberg Complex of South Africa is another large
and syenites. Further concentration can occur because the (> 500 square kilometres) alkaline complex with eudialyte-
HFSE typically form relatively dense minerals, which may rich syenites that are enriched in zirconium, niobium and
be accumulated through crystal settling into layers. The the REE.
most famous example of a niobium deposit formed in this
way is in the Ilímaussaq Complex of south-west Green- In eastern Canada, the Strange Lake peralkaline granite
land. However, many mineralised deposits within alkaline pluton, which is Mesoproterozoic in age, outcrops over an
rocks, such as the Motzfeldt deposit in Greenland, have area of about 36 square kilometres. It has a central ore
undergone further concentration of elements such as the zone where the granite has undergone extensive haema-
HFSE and REE through hydrothermal36 processes (Salvi and tisation38 and calcium metasomatism, producing a range
Williams-Jones, 2005). The HFSE and REE appear to be of secondary HFSE-bearing minerals, including gittinsite39
highly mobile in fluids associated with peralkaline magmas and pyrochlore. Ore from this zone has an average grade
that are enriched in fluorine, chlorine (Cl) and/or carbon of 0.56 weight per cent niobium oxide (Salvi and Williams-
dioxide (Goodenough et al., 2000, Salvi and Williams- Jones, 2005, Salvi and Williams-Jones, 2006). In Canada’s
Jones, 2005). Northwest Territories, the Palaeoproterozoic Blatchford
Lake igneous complex comprises syenites and peralkaline
At the time of writing, there are few niobium or tantalum granites with a number of hydrothermally altered miner-
Niobium–tantalum
mines operating in alkaline granite and syenite complexes, alised zones, known as the Thor Lake deposits. These de-
although exploration is under way in some areas. One posits are enriched in beryllium (Be), yttrium, REE, niobium,
major area of interest lies in the Mesoproterozoic37 Gardar tantalum and zirconium, with columbite-tantalite minerals
Igneous Province in south-west Greenland, including the hosting the majority of the niobium and tantalum, and
Ilímaussaq and Motzfeldt complexes. The Ilímaussaq average grades up to 0.4 weight per cent niobium (Salvi
Complex is elliptical, 8 x 17 kilometres at the surface, and and Williams-Jones, 2005). The Thor Lake deposits are
comprises a range of mineralogically unique syenites and currently owned by Avalon Rare Metals Inc, which intends
alkaline granites which are spectacularly layered in places to develop them for REE, niobium and tantalum.
(Larsen and Sorensen, 1987). The main mineral deposits
occur in a unit of layered syenites known as kakortokites, In Mongolia, the Devonian-age Khaldzan-Buregtey
which contains twenty-nine separate layers that are rich zirconium-niobium-REE deposit is formed by the hydrother-
in eudialyte, with high contents of zirconium, yttrium, mally altered late phase intrusions of a peralkaline granite
niobium and the REE. The average grade of niobium in massif (Kovalenko et al., 1995). Pyrochlore is the main
these layers is 0.1 weight per cent niobium oxide (Salvi niobium ore mineral. In Malawi, exploration is ongoing at
and Williams-Jones, 2005). In the Kvanefjeld area of the the Kanyika niobium-tantalum deposit, which comprises
Ilímaussaq Complex, hydrothermal veins in the syenites an elongate body of nepheline syenite over 3.5 kilome-
and their country rocks contain significant uranium-niobium tres long with numerous mineralised, pyrochlore-bearing
mineralisation. Zones of hydrothermally altered syenite veins (BGS, 2009). In Saudi Arabia, the Ghurayyah alkaline
also host the niobium-tantalum-REE pyrochlore mineralisa- granite stock is about 800 metres in surface diameter and
tion in the Motzfeldt intrusion (Steenfelt, 1991) which is contains disseminated tantalum and niobium ore minerals,
the subject of an ongoing exploration programme. chiefly columbite-tantalite and pyrochlore. The distribu-
tion of these ore minerals appears to be remarkably
consistent throughout the granite (Küster, 2009). In Brazil,
34
Lithospheric: the lithosphere is the outer, rigid layer of the Earth, including
niobium and tantalum are extracted along with tin from
both the Earth’s crust and the uppermost part of the mantle. a Palaeoproterozoic-age albite-rich peralkaline granite at
35
Incompatible elements: are those that are concentrated into molten magmas,
rather than into early-forming crystals of solid minerals.
36 38
Hydrothermal: formed from hot water-rich fluids. Haematisation: alteration associated with the formation of the iron oxide
37
Mesoproterozoic: a unit of geological time between 1600 and 1000 million mineral, haematite.
39
years ago. Gittinsite: A calcium-zirconium-bearing silicate mineral.
5 www.MineralsUK.com
6. the Pitinga mine (Bastos-Neto et al., 2009). Alkaline to between 2008 and 2011. Both mines are owned by Global
peralkaline intrusions with the potential for niobium and/or Advanced Metals (previously Talison). The Greenbushes
tantalum deposits occur in many other countries, including mine in south-western Australia is hosted in a giant
Morocco, Nigeria, and Namibia. (greater than three kilometre long) syn-tectonic44, zoned,
complex-type pegmatite body of Archaean45 age, which
Granites and pegmatites of the LCT family (enriched contains large resources of both tantalum and lithium, as-
in lithium, caesium, tantalum) sociated with tin mineralisation. This pegmatite does not
Granites and pegmatites of the LCT family are typically appear to be genetically associated with a larger granitic
peraluminous40 and enriched in lithium, rubidium, caesium, body (Partington et al., 1995). Three phases of tantalum
beryllium, tin (Sn), tantalum and niobium (tantalum greater mineralisation are recorded within this pegmatite: early-
ˇ
than niobium) (Cerný and Ercit, 2005). These magmas are formed minerals such as wodginite and ixiolite, which
formed by melting of pre-existing crustal rocks, and were form inclusions in cassiterite and tourmaline; tantalites
most commonly emplaced as post-orogenic plutons in and tapiolites in fractures within early silicate phases;
zones of continental collision. Granites and pegmatites of and later hydrothermal mineralisation, where microlite is
this type are the main hosts for tantalum deposits across the main tantalum mineral (Partington et al., 1995). The
the world. These intrusions typically take the form of a Greenbushes pegmatite has been exploited by both open
large peraluminous leucogranitic41 pluton surrounded by a pit and underground mining. In north-western Australia,
halo of pegmatites, with the most mineralised pegmatites a large number of pegmatite swarms occur within the
ˇ
at the greatest distance from the granite (Cerný, 1989), Archaean rocks of the Pilbara Craton, and many of these
although in some areas swarms of pegmatites are not as- include some tantalum-mineralised examples. The most
sociated with exposed granitic plutons. important area here is the Wodgina pegmatite district,
which includes the Wodgina Main Lode and Mount Cassit-
The granite bodies contain minerals such as biotite, erite tantalum-mineralised pegmatites. The Wodgina Main
muscovite, topaz and tourmaline, and are typically rather Lode is a dyke-like pegmatite about one kilometre long,
Niobium–tantalum
heterogeneous, showing extensive albitisation42 and of albite-type, with manganese-rich tantalite as the main
alteration by late-stage fluids. These granites may contain tantalum mineral, together with some manganese-rich
disseminated tantalum ore minerals, particularly concen- columbite and wodginite. At Mount Cassiterite the deposit
trated in the uppermost parts of the granitic body (Linnen is formed by a series of pegmatite sheets of albite-spo-
and Cuney, 2005). dumene type, and wodginite is the main tantalum mineral
(Sweetapple and Collins, 2002). Tantalum from these
Many of the largest tantalum deposits occur in pegmatite pegmatites is extracted by open pit mining.
swarms. LCT pegmatites can be divided into five types: the
beryl type; the complex (spodumene-petalite-amblygonite) An Archaean pegmatite body also forms the host for the
type; the complex lepidolite type; the albite-spodumene tantalum mineralisation at Tanco, in Manitoba, Canada,
ˇ
type; and the albite type (Cerný, 1989). Many of the owned by Cabot Corporation. It is part of the rare-metal
pegmatites falling into the first three types are zoned. All bearing Bernic Lake pegmatite group, which intrudes
types can contain a range of tantalum minerals, of which metavolcanic46 Archaean rocks. The Tanco pegmatite
the most important are generally columbite-tantalite, forms a shallowly dipping sheet, up to about 100 metres
microlite, ixiolite and wodginite. Tantalum-rich cassiterite thick and 1600 metres along strike, which is exploited in
(tin oxide) is also an important ore mineral in some bodies. a room-and-pillar underground mine. It is of the complex
Many of the pegmatites have been highly affected by late- pegmatite type, and is strongly zoned; tantalum ore miner-
stage alteration, such as kaolinisation43. als are found throughout, though concentrated at higher
grade in certain zones. A wide range of tantalum minerals
In recent years, much of the world’s production of tantalum occur (14 in all) and they are generally fine-grained, mean-
has come from the Greenbushes and Wodgina mines in ˇ
ing that processing of Tanco ore is rather difficult (Cerný,
Australia, although production from these mines ceased 1989). Caesium and lithium are also produced from the
Tanco pegmatite. In addition, numerous other tantalum-
40
Peraluminous: a chemical term used for rocks in which the total molecu- mineralised pegmatites are known from the Superior
lar (calcium oxide + sodium oxide + potassium oxide) is less than molecular
aluminium oxide.
41 44
Leucogranitic: a light-coloured, silica-rich type of granite. Syn-tectonic: formed during an episode of tectonic activity and deformation of
42
Albitisation: alteration by fluids to produce the sodium-rich mineral, albite, a the Earth’s crust, usually an episode of continental collision.
45
type of feldspar. Archaean: a unit of geological time between 3800 and 2500 million years ago.
43 46
Kaolinisation: alteration of rocks to produce kaolin, also known as china clay. Metavolcanic: metamorphosed volcanic rocks.
6 www.MineralsUK.com
7. Province of Ontario and Manitoba (Selway et al., 2005). In North Africa, intruded into the Neoproterozoic rocks of
Brazil, a large (about one kilometre long), zoned, Protero- the Arabian-Nubian Shield (Küster, 2009). These include
zoic47 pegmatite body of albite-spodumene type is mined the Kenticha pegmatite field in Ethiopia, the Majahayan
for tantalum, niobium and lithium at the Volta Grande mine pegmatites of Somalia, and the Abu Dabbab and Nuweibi
at Nazareno, in the Minas Gerais district (Lagache and granites in Egypt. At Kenticha, the pegmatite field as a
Quemeneur, 1997). whole has an area of approximately 2500 square kilome-
tres, but tantalum mining is focused on the Main Kenticha
In Mozambique, the Alto Ligonha Pegmatite Province Pegmatite, a Cambrian-age dyke-like zoned pegmatite of
contains numerous mineralised pegmatites which have complex-spodumene type which is mined for columbite-
been mined since 1926, with tantalum mining and explora- tantalite minerals (Küster, 2009). In Egypt, the Abu Dabbab
tion currently focused in the zoned Marropino and Morrua and Nuweibi prospects are currently being developed
pegmatites, owned by Noventa Ltd. These pegmatites are towards production. These deposits are unusual in that
intruded into the Proterozoic rocks of the Nampula Sub- the mineralisation is found in stock-like granite intrusions,
province, and they are considered to be Ordovician48 in age rather than in pegmatites. Columbite-tantalite minerals are
(Graupner et al., 2010). Numerous examples of tantalum- disseminated throughout these intrusions, and although
mineralised granites and pegmatites are also found in the granites show significant evidence of later metaso-
matic alteration, the tantalum minerals are considered to
47
Proterozoic: a unit of geological time between 2500 and 542 million years ago. be magmatic in origin (Küster, 2009).
48
Ordovician: a unit of geological time between 488 and 443 million years ago.
Deposit type Brief description Typical grades and tonnage Major examples
Carbonatite-hosted Niobium deposits found Niobec, proven & probable Niobec, Canada; Oka,
primary deposits within carbonatitic igneous reserves: 23.5 million tonnes Canada
Niobium–tantalum
rocks in alkaline igneous at 0.59% Nb2O5
provinces
Carbonatite-sourced Zones of intense weather- < 1000 million tonnes at up to Araxá and Catala Brazil;
˘o,
secondary deposits ing or sedimentary succes- 3% Nb2O5 in lateritic deposits. Tomtor, Russia; Lueshe,
sions above carbonatite Up to 12% Nb2O5 in placer Democratic Republic of
intrusions in which niobium deposit at Tomtor, tonnage not Congo
ore minerals are concen- known
trated
Alkaline granite and Niobium and lesser tanta- Generally < 100 million tonnes, Motzfeldt and Ilímaussaq,
syenite lum deposits associated at grades of 0.1 to 1% Nb2O5 Greenland; Lovozero, Rus-
with silicic alkaline igneous and < 0.1% Ta2O5 sia; Thor Lake and Strange
rocks. Ore minerals may be Lake, Canada; Pitinga,
concentrated by magmatic Brazil; Ghurayyah, Saudi
or hydrothermal processes Arabia; Kanyika, Malawi
LCT-type granite Tantalum and lesser Generally < 100 million tonnes, Abu Dabbab and Nuweibi,
niobium deposits associ- at grades of < 0.05% Ta2O5 Egypt; Yichun, China
ated with peraluminous
leucogranitic plutons, which
are often hydrothermally
altered
LCT-type pegmatite Tantalum and lesser nio- Generally < 100 million tonnes, Greenbushes and Wodgina,
bium deposits associated at grades of < 0.05% Ta2O5 Australia; Tanco, Canada;
with pegmatites of LCT Volta Grande, Brazil; Ken-
(Li-Cs-Ta-enriched) type ticha, Ethiopia; Morrua &
Marropino, Mozambique
Table 3 Key characteristics and examples of the major types of niobium and tantalum deposits (grades and tonnages
are very variable between deposits and figures given are indicative only).
7 www.MineralsUK.com
8. 8
Niobium–tantalum
Figure 3 Map showing the global distribution of niobium and tantalum mines, deposits and major occurrences.
www.MineralsUK.com
9. In Central Africa, a zone of Neoproterozoic-age tantalum- blasting where materials have become cemented. For
mineralised pegmatites cuts the Mesoproterozoic Kibaran example, tin-tantalum placers in Malaysia are mined using
belt which extends through Burundi, Rwanda, Uganda and simple stripping methods, whilst hard-rock surface opera-
the Democratic Republic of Congo (Romer and Lehmann, tions, such as Wodgina Mine, are mined using drilling and
1995). Columbite-tantalite minerals are mined both from blasting techniques.
deeply weathered pegmatites and from secondary placer
deposits derived from the pegmatites. Capital and operating costs for open-pit techniques are far
less than those for underground operations.
Several regions of China have tantalum-mineralised gran-
ites and pegmatites. The most well known is the Yichun Underground mining
deposit, which is hosted in a small (less than 10 square Underground mining methods are usually employed when
kilometres) granitic batholith of Jurassic age. The upper- surface methods are, or become prohibitively expensive, for
most part of this batholith is a highly fractionated topaz- example if the deposit becomes too deep. Another major
lepidolite granite, which contains tantalum mineralisation factor in the decision to use underground methods is the
in the form of disseminated columbite-tantalite, tantalum- waste to ore ratio, or strip ratio. Once the ratio becomes
rich cassiterite, and minor microlite (Yin et al., 1995). large, open-pit mining methods become uneconomic.
Elsewhere in China, the Altai pegmatites (north-western
China) and the Nanping pegmatites (south-eastern China) Underground operations commonly require extensive mine
have been mined for columbite-tantalite in the past. In development including shaft sinking, de-watering, ventila-
Malaysia and south-western Thailand, tin is produced from tion, geo-technical support and ore handling. Room and
weathered tin-mineralised granites and pegmatites, and pillar is an underground mining technique where mining
from secondary placer deposits. The tin slags are being progresses in a horizontal direction by developing numer-
reprocessed to produce tantalum. ous stopes49, or rooms, leaving pillars of material for
roof support. Ore is blasted and then transported by rail,
Niobium–tantalum
Extraction methods and processing conveyor or dump truck to the processing plant. Room and
pillar mining methods were used at the Tanco pegmatite in
Extraction Manitoba, Canada. The mine is located under Bernic Lake
The mining methods employed to extract niobium and and is accessed via a 60-metre shaft and via a 20-degree
tantalum are similar to other metals of comparable occur- decline50 from the surface (Cabot, 2001).
rence. Factors that dictate the selection of mining methods
include: the physical and chemical properties of the ore By-product production
mineral; the tonnage and grade; and the shape, geometry Niobium and tantalum can also be extracted as a by-product
and depth of the orebody. The most common methods of of tin smelter waste. Niobium produced in this way accounts
extraction are surface (or open-pit) and sub-surface (or for less than two per cent of total global niobium production.
underground) mining, or a combination of both. Significant However, the percentage is much higher for tantalum at
amounts of niobium and tantalum are also extracted by around 14 per cent. Tantalum is extracted from cassiterite51
artisanal and small scale mining (ASM). placer middlings52 using shaking tables, and magnetic53
and electrostatic54 separation methods. Tin smelter waste
Surface mining typically contains eight to 10 per cent tantalum oxide,
Massive, or steeply-dipping, low-grade near-surface although exceptionally this may rise to 30 per cent. Low-
ore bodies are amenable to open-pit mining techniques. grade smelter wastes can be upgraded by electrothermic
Open-pit methods commonly involve removing overburden, reduction55 yielding a synthetic concentrate with up to 50
digging or blasting the ore, followed by removal of the ore per cent tantalum and niobium oxides (Roethe, 1989).
by truck or conveyor belt for stockpiling prior to processing.
Open-pit mining may reach depths of several hundred me-
49
Stope: the void created by extracting the ore.
tres but seldom exceeds 100 metres. Heavily weathered 50
Decline: a mine entrance which is neither horizontal nor vertical; often it takes
ore bodies, such as the Araxá carbonatite deposit in Brazil, the form of a spiral ramp.
51
are also mined using open-pit methods. Cassiterite: tin oxide ore mineral, SnO2.
52
Middlings: particles of intermediate grade and size.
53
Magnetic separation: the selective sorting of magnetically susceptible ore
Land-based placer deposits are amenable to strip mining minerals using magnetic force.
54
Electrostatic separation: the selective sorting of ore minerals using an electric
involving scrapers, bulldozers and loaders. Placer deposits field.
can be poorly consolidated, and only require drilling and 55
Electrothermic reduction: a reduction reaction performed in an electric arc
furnace, utilising calcium oxide, iron oxide and carbon as reducing agents.
9 www.MineralsUK.com
10. 10
Niobium–tantalum
ORE TYPE
Pyrochlore Tantalite
e.g. Niobec Mine e.g. Greenbushes Mine
Crushing, milling and Undersize material
screening stages to tailings
Coarse desliming Fine desliming Coarse and fine gravity
separation using shaking
Coarse carbonate Fine carbonate tables, jigs and spirals
flotation flotation
Concentrate de-watering
using cyclones and filter bed
Desliming Slimes
Concentrate drying
Low intensity Magnetite
magnetic separation
Concentrate (4-6% Ta2O5)
Diamine collector Pyrochlore flotation Tailings
High intensity magnetic Non-magnetic
separation fraction to tailings
Xanthates Sulphide flotation Sulphides
Magnetic fraction roasted Antimony and
Hydrochloric Concentrate leaching minor sulphides to
Acid tailings
Concentrate (54% Nb2O5) Concentrate (20-30% Ta2O5)
Figure 4 Generalised beneficiation flow diagrams, based upon the Niobec and Greenbushes operations.
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11. Processing At the Greenbushes mine in Australia tin-tantalum ores
After mining the ores are processed to increase their are processed using a circuit of shaking tables, spirals
niobium and tantalum contents. Initial concentration is nor- and jigs63. The rough concentrate is de-watered and dried
mally undertaken at, or close to, the mine site and involves producing a tantalum concentrate containing about four
crushing the ore followed by separation of niobium and to six per cent tantalum oxide. High intensity magnetic
tantalum ore from gangue56 material, using a combination separation is used to separate the paramagnetic64 tanta-
of physical and chemical methods. Although niobium and lum grains from the non-magnetic tin-tantalum grains; the
tantalum are geochemically similar each requires a differ- paramagnetic fraction is further concentrated to around
ent processing route. 30 per cent tantalum oxide by roasting. The non-magnetic
fraction is further processed using a combination of froth
Ore beneficiation flotation and roasting to remove sulphides, and smelting to
Niobium ore is first crushed in jaw, cone or impact crushers separate tantalum from tin (Figure 4) (Fetherston, 2004).
and milled in rod or ball mills operating in closed circuits with
vibrating screens and screw classifiers57 to liberate niobium Conversion to metal
mineral particles. The slurry containing niobium and waste Tantalum and niobium metal can be produced from three
rock is further concentrated to around 54 per cent niobium different compounds — fluorides, oxides and chlorides
oxide using a number of methods in multiple stages: grav- (Albrecht, 1989). The tantalum and niobium compounds are
ity separation58, froth flotation59, magnetic and electrostatic reduced to form pure metals and metal powders by two
separation, and acid leaching60 may be used, depending on main methods.
the physical and chemical characteristics of the ore.
A mixed niobium-tantalum concentrate is digested using a
At the Niobec operation in Canada niobium ore is screened mixture of hydrofluoric and sulphuric acids. The niobium-
and classified, after which the resultant slurry is sent for tantalum-bearing acid solution is then treated using liquid-
desliming61. Carbonate material is removed by two stages liquid separation methods, involving solvent extraction or
Niobium–tantalum
of froth flotation, followed by an additional desliming ion exchange, to separate niobium from tantalum. Niobium
stage. Magnetite is removed from the slurry, by low and tantalum can be extracted from the hydrofluoric-
intensity magnetic separation, and sent to waste. The sulphuric acid mixture by using organic solvents, such as
sought-after pyrochlore is collected from the slurry by cyclohexanone, tributyl phosphate (TBP) or methyl isobutyl
froth flotation using diamine collectors62. A final stage of ketone (MIBK), whilst leaving behind impurities such as
froth flotation is used to remove sulphides, such as pyrite. iron, manganese, tin and titanium (Figure 5). Ion exchange
Residual impurities are leached by hydrochloric acid, leav- is used to produce high-purity solutions of niobium and
ing a final concentrate that contains around 54 per cent tantalum and is usually performed using an amine extract-
niobium oxide (Figure 4) (Iamgold, 2009). ant in kerosene.
Tantalum ores are initially treated in a similar manner to Niobium and tantalum are precipitated as hydroxides from
niobium ores; they are crushed, milled and screened to the mixed organic solvent solution by the addition of am-
liberate tantalum mineral particles. The slurry containing monia (NH3). The resultant hydroxides are calcined65 in a
tantalum and waste material is concentrated to around furnace to form niobium and tantalum oxides. The process
30 per cent tantalum oxide using predominantly gravity of sintering66 the oxide products, with carbon, at high
and magnetic separation techniques, again depending temperature is used to produce niobium and tantalum car-
upon the characteristics of the ore. bides. Niobium oxide is also the starting point for niobium
metal production. The addition of potassium fluoride to the
56
Gangue: waste material associated with ore minerals. mixed organic solvent solution results in the crystallisation
57
Screw classifiers: a wet gravity separation method in which dense particles of potassium tantalum fluoride (K2TaF7), the pre-requisite
are removed from a slurry by a series of rotating rakes (similar to an Archimedes
for tantalum metal production (Figure 5).
Screw)
58
Gravity separation: the selective sorting of ore minerals by exploiting natural
variations in mineral density.
59 63
Froth flotation: the selective separation of hydrophobic (water-repelling) ore Shaking tables, spirals and jigs: water and gravity based separation devices.
64
minerals from hydrophilic (water-attracting) ore minerals. Paramagnetic: a form of magnetism that only occurs in the presence of an
60
Acid leaching: the process of extracting metal from a concentrate using externally applied magnetic field.
65
mineral acids. Calcined: a thermal process applied to ores in order to bring about decomposi-
61
Desliming: the removal of particles in the micron size range prior to process- tion, phase transitions or the removal of volatile matter (e.g. carbon dioxide and
ing. water).
62 66
Diamine collectors: a positively charged cationic collector used to float rare- Sintering: a process of forming a coherent bonded mass by heating metal
metal oxides. powders without melting.
11 www.MineralsUK.com
13. and is defined as mining activities that are labour-intensive
but capital-, mechanisation- and technology-poor. ASM is Small scale mining of
coltan in Democratic
characterised by:
Republic of Congo
▪ Poor occupational safety
ore
▪ Poorly qualified and trained personnel
▪ Inefficiency in extraction and processing
Ore is transported
▪ Low salaries
to neighbouring
▪ Insufficient consideration of environmental issues
Rwanda, Uganda or
Burundi
Additionally, ASM is often unregulated with many activi-
ties falling outside the host countries’ legal framework ore
(Hentschel et al., 2003).
Certain minerals, such as gold, tin, tungsten and colum- Ore shipped to
bite-tantalite (coltan) (Figure 6), which are produced in Asia for smelting and
significant quantities by ASM, can sometimes be mined in conversion to metal
conditions of armed conflict and human rights violations.
The mining of these minerals under such conditions has processed material
given rise to the term ‘conflict minerals’. Their illicit mining
is often organised by armed groups who use the profits Processed material
from the sale of the conflict minerals to further their own shipped to the western
ends and to finance further fighting. world to produce
electrical components
Niobium–tantalum
Coltan is found in significant quantities in parts of central such as capacitors
Africa, in particular the Democratic Republic of Congo
(DRC). It is estimated that in 2009 over 50 per cent of electrical components
global tantalum production was from Africa. In the DRC
small scale mining of coltan, from either alluvial or
Components shipped
pegmatite sources, is labour intensive and unregulated.
to Asia to manufacture
Consequently it is difficult to accurately calculate the circuit boards and
quantity of coltan mined and exported. It is believed that consumer electronics
the majority of coltan mined in the DRC ends up in neigh-
bouring countries such as Rwanda, Burundi and Uganda.
consumer goods
It is estimated that rebel groups in the DRC made in
excess of $1 billion in 2009 through conflict mineral trad-
ing (Bunting, 2010). Mobile phones, MP3
players, laptops and
cameras are sold in
Illegally traded coltan ore may end up in consumer elec-
Europe and the USA
tronic products throughout the world. Ore from Rwanda,
Burundi or Uganda may be shipped to Asia for processing
and smelting. Once processed it is impossible to determine Figure 7 An example of a conflict mineral supply
the source of the original ore. The processed material may chain. Source: (Enough Project, 2011).
then be shipped to the western world for use in electrical
components such as capacitors. Finally these components
may be exported to Asia for inclusion in consumer elec- refusing to use conflict mineral-bearing components in
tronic goods such as mobile phones (Figure 7). their products. However, it is likely to prove difficult to
completely avoid the use of these components for the
Many non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and reasons explained above. The success of these schemes
charities have initiated schemes aimed at alleviating also relies on the ability of countries like the DRC to
the problems of ASM and conflict mineral trading. In monitor exports, control its army and combat rebel forces
addition some large electronics companies are now (Bunting, 2010).
13 www.MineralsUK.com