Beneficiation of a Low-Ggrade, Hematitemagnetite Ore in China

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Siqing Liu Yang Zhao Wanping Wang Shuming Wen
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
7
File Size:
1804 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2015

Abstract

"In China, most reserves of rich iron ores have now been depleted and sustainable development of low-grade iron ores has become a critical discussion topic in the mining industry today. The aim of this study was to evaluate the applicability of beneficiating a low-grade, hematite-magnetite ore (assaying 18.64% Fe) for subsequent utilization. In this study, process mineralogy and beneficiation of the ore were carried out in the laboratory. First, mineralogical investigation shows that the main metal minerals are hematite, magnetite and a little octahedrite that cannot be used at present, and the main gangue minerals include albite, quartz and ankerite. Based on the above, a combined process of magnetic separation and gravity concentration has been developed by using laboratory low- and high- intensity magnetic separators and a slimes shaking table, respectively. Factors affecting these separation methods are discussed, including process mineralogy on the tailings of the high-intensity separator, where the iron minerals were found to be finely disseminated in the gangue as inclusions. By applying a two-stage grinding step and a magnetic separation stage together with gravity concentration, a marketable iron concentrate assaying 60.79% Fe at a recovery of 60.23% can be obtained, when the feed assays 18.75%Fe, which provides some useful information for the sustainable use of low-grade iron ore.IntroductionIron is the world’s most commonly used metal. Steel, of which iron ore is the key ingredient, represents almost 95% of all metal used per year, primarily in structural engineering applications and for maritime purposes, automobiles and general industrial applications. By the end of 2009, the iron and steel production in China ranked the first in the world, and reached 0.567 and 0.537 billion tons, respectively. The domestic supply of iron ore was 0.88 billion tons and about 0.628 billion tons of iron ore were imported in 2009."
Citation

APA: Siqing Liu Yang Zhao Wanping Wang Shuming Wen  (2015)  Beneficiation of a Low-Ggrade, Hematitemagnetite Ore in China

MLA: Siqing Liu Yang Zhao Wanping Wang Shuming Wen Beneficiation of a Low-Ggrade, Hematitemagnetite Ore in China. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2015.

Export
Purchase this Article for $25.00

Create a Guest account to purchase this file
- or -
Log in to your existing Guest account