Concentration - Electrostatic Separation - The Electrostatic Separation of Several Industrial Minerals (Mining Tech., July 1948, TP 2408, with discussion)

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 12
- File Size:
- 533 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1949
Abstract
Electrostatic methods of separation are used only when some peculiar advantage is gained. Such cases are minerals that are not separable by differences in specific gravity or magnetic response and that are desired in particles as large as 10-mesh, a size on which flotation separation is inefficient. This paper covers several separations of this type and others. It includes studies in the electrostatic behavior of kyanite, sillimanite, and zircon, simple silicates that cannot be called either acid or basic but are more nearly neutral. Kyanite and sillimanite are both desired in 10-mesh size and are difficult to bene-ficiate from low-grade ores to give that type of concentrate. A separation of garnet from diopside was studied because this mixture had been removed from a wollas-tonite product by drying and magnetic separation, and no special or extra-preparation for electrostatic separation was necessary. The Separator The separator used in these tests is of the nonhomogeneous field type shown in Fig Ia. It consists of a 11.4-cm-diam rotating metal roll 2 at ground potential over which the dry mixture of minerals is fed. The roll serves as one electrode of the separating field, and the other electrode is that of 3, a smaller 5-cm-diam rotating metal cylinder which is held at a high direct-current potential. In this paper the term "electrode" will be confined to the electrode at 3, roll 2 being designated only as "roll."
Citation
APA:
(1949) Concentration - Electrostatic Separation - The Electrostatic Separation of Several Industrial Minerals (Mining Tech., July 1948, TP 2408, with discussion)MLA: Concentration - Electrostatic Separation - The Electrostatic Separation of Several Industrial Minerals (Mining Tech., July 1948, TP 2408, with discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1949.