Centrifugal Flotation of Coal at Particle Sizes Below 20 ?m

- Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 9
- File Size:
- 713 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1993
Abstract
Froth flotation processes use different surface properties of the minerals to be sorted. In an aqueous environment the hydrophobic mineral attaches selectively to air bubbles and is lifted to the surface of a separation vessel, while the tailings settle towards its bottom. Besides the surface properties, the hydrodynamic conditions play an important role. With respect to the hydrodynamics the flotation process can be divided, for simplicity, in two sub-processes. The attachment of hydrophobic particles to air bubbles, the so-called mineralisation, demands a large number of collisions and therefore high turbulences. The phase separation however needs a deterministic movement of both the particle-bubbles-aggregates and the tailings particles and therefore a quiescent flow field. The optimisation of the overall process requires a separation of both sub-processes, especially when fine particles have to be sorted. In conventional mechanically agitated flotation cells both sub-processes take place in the same turbulent volume. For this reason they suffer from a decreasing selectivity with decreasing particle size. In flotation columns the mineralisation of air bubbles and the phase separation are performed in a quiescent environment. This results in high concentrate grades and at the same time in a very slow attachment kinetics, which must, especially for fine particles, be counterbalanced by a long residence time of the slurry.
Citation
APA:
(1993) Centrifugal Flotation of Coal at Particle Sizes Below 20 ?mMLA: Centrifugal Flotation of Coal at Particle Sizes Below 20 ?m. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1993.