Chemical Grinding Aids For Increasing Throughput In The Wet Grinding Of Ores

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 25
- File Size:
- 703 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1977
Abstract
1. Introduction Laboratory and industrial grinding tests have shown that the process of size reduction can be significantly influenced by chemicals added to the powder or slurry being ground. The terms grinding aid or grinding additive refers to a substance which when mixed into the mill contents causes an increase in the rate of size reduction. The increased rate can be used to grind a higher feed rate to the desired product size or it can be used to produce a finer product size at a fixed feed rate. Whether the use of a grinding aid is justified in any given situation depends on the cost of the substance versus the improvement of output or product quality obtained with its use. Obviously, an expensive chemical must be effective in very small concentrations if it is to be economically justifiable; the cost criteria is calculated on the basis of the cost of the grinding additive per ton of material ground. Although there is direct experimental verification of the advantageous effect of grinding additives, no sound scientific explanation has yet been offered which explains or predicts the general behavior of additives. Rose and Sullivan have summarized most of the work undertaken prior to 1950 and Hartley, Prisbrey, and Wick have recently prepared an updated synopsis of the grinding additive literature. Many of the studies reported consist of subjecting materials with simple geometric shapes to some type of hardness or controlled single fracture test. On the other hand, a number of the studies were carried out on operating industrial scale mills, with little control or precise monitoring of the effect of the additives.
Citation
APA:
(1977) Chemical Grinding Aids For Increasing Throughput In The Wet Grinding Of OresMLA: Chemical Grinding Aids For Increasing Throughput In The Wet Grinding Of Ores. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1977.