Coal - High-Efficiency Desliming by Use of Hydraulic Water Additions to the Liquid-Solid Cyclone

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 6
- File Size:
- 593 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1953
Abstract
THE necessity for slime elimination from valuable mineral and coal products has become increasingly significant within the past 5 years.' , Most of the mechanized mining and present beneficiation methods have resulted in larger tonnages of extreme fines, silts, and clay, commonly called slimes, processed by the preparation plant. Economics in turn have forced the plant operator constantly to lower the bottom size of effective beneficiation, necessitating an almost complete recovery of valuable solids regardless of particle size. When these important factors are considered, the need for an efficient slime removal method for fine solids becomes self-evident. Ordinarily slimes have been classified as ranging from 75 microns, or 200 mesh, down to colloidal dimensions of less than one micron. At the same time there is general agreement that the most troublesome slimes are primarily clays, silts and extreme fines, so that the actual top size may be placed at approximately 30 to 40 microns. This immediately restricts any desliming operation to classification, as screening or other methods would be both uneconomical and grossly inefficient at such dimensions. The liquid-solid cyclone has been recognized as one of the most efficient fine size classifiers available to the mining industry. Applications of cyclones to thickening, high efficiency solid recovery, degritting,
Citation
APA:
(1953) Coal - High-Efficiency Desliming by Use of Hydraulic Water Additions to the Liquid-Solid CycloneMLA: Coal - High-Efficiency Desliming by Use of Hydraulic Water Additions to the Liquid-Solid Cyclone. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1953.