Beneficiation Of Magnetic Iron Concentrates By Cationic Silica Flotation With Amine Acetates ? Introduction

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Alvin D. Cronberg
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
12
File Size:
671 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1968

Abstract

Silica flotation with amine salts has been a commercial process for years in certain non-sulfide mineral systems. Phosphate rock and feldspar deposits are notable examples. Generally, the quartz is clean and coarse. Primary amines and imidazolines are used, usually in a mole weight range 250-300, ad often fairly impure grades of collectors are satisfactory. As the production of magnetic iron concentrates grew in Michigan, Minnesota, Canada and in foreign locations, the iron mining companies began to explore amine flotation of silica to improve these concentrates. Many of the mining companies, as well as reagent suppliers, government laboratories and university research teams, had already studied amine collectors for silica, but the application to magnetic iron concentrates presented a real commercial opportunity to apply the art. Amine flotation of silica has been accomplished by simple addition of a flotation cell, and possibly a regrind mill, at the end of the magnetic concentration process. The flotation system gave the mill operator a flexible method to control final grade caused by ore variations in the feed. It increased iron content with lower silica, which resulted in lower freight costs per unit Fe and better pellets for blast furnace use.
Citation

APA: Alvin D. Cronberg  (1968)  Beneficiation Of Magnetic Iron Concentrates By Cationic Silica Flotation With Amine Acetates ? Introduction

MLA: Alvin D. Cronberg Beneficiation Of Magnetic Iron Concentrates By Cationic Silica Flotation With Amine Acetates ? Introduction. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1968.

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