Comparative Study on Flotation Performance of Stockpiled and Fresh Ore Samples

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
B. Nanthakumar S. Kelebek T. Katsabanis C. Pelley
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
16
File Size:
281 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2006

Abstract

"As part of a larger investigation on generation of fines from mining activities and their effect on downstream operations, ore samples from Onaping area stockpiles of Falconbridge Ltd were studied. Batch flotation tests were conducted on the stockpile samples and fresh ore samples to explore the effect of stockpiling on grade-recovery performance. Head grade and particle size distribution of the samples from stockpiles were adjusted so that the samples compared are similar to each other. In additional tests, fresh ore samples were blended with stockpile samples at various percentages, representing 27.4, 50.2 and 81.5% of stockpile samples.The samples from stockpiles produced inferior nickel grade-recovery curves compared to fresh ore. The poorer grade-recovery performance was attributable to two factors. First, a significant dilution effect was observed due to the nearly complete flotation of pyrrhotite. Secondly, while pyrrhotite from stockpiled ore became highly floatable, the same stockpiling conditions caused nickel losses that were attributable to non-floatability of some pentlandite.In the case of blending, there was generally insignificant difference in the nickel grade-recovery between fresh and blended samples when the blending cases involved 27.4 and 50.2% stockpile samples. However, an increase in pyrrhotite recovery was observed for both blending cases. At 81.5% blending case, degraded grade-recovery was significant primarily due to the nearly complete flotation of pyrrhotite. There was a small, but noticeable amount of nickel loss for this case. However, for lower ratios of blending this loss was negligible.The increase in pyrrhotite recovery was partly attributed to its activation by Cu and Ni ions. Formation of a significant amount of elemental sulphur was also apparent from analysis of stockpiled samples. It can be concluded that pyrrhotite is mildly oxidized under stockpiling conditions while part of the pentlandite undergoes a more severe oxidation."
Citation

APA: B. Nanthakumar S. Kelebek T. Katsabanis C. Pelley  (2006)  Comparative Study on Flotation Performance of Stockpiled and Fresh Ore Samples

MLA: B. Nanthakumar S. Kelebek T. Katsabanis C. Pelley Comparative Study on Flotation Performance of Stockpiled and Fresh Ore Samples. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2006.

Export
Purchase this Article for $25.00

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