Froth Flotation Of Coal

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
C. P. Proctor Clare B. Carlson
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
15
File Size:
626 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1943

Abstract

THE history of the froth flotation of coal is relatively short. The flotation process was applied to fine-coal cleaning about the time of the end of World War I. Coal flotation finds more widespread use in Europe than in the United States and is used on a commercial scale in nearly all major coal-producing countries in the world. In Fig. 1 the general arrangement of a froth-flotation plant at a British colliery is shown. GENERAL FEATIJIEES OF THE PROCESS Application The flotation process is applicable to the cleaning of the fine sizes, particularly minus 48-mesh coal, although it may be used on sizes as coarse as 1/8 in. Since most cleaning processes usually are not effective on sizes smaller than 48-mesh and certainly not effective on minus 100- mesh, the froth-flotation process offers a solution to the problem of cleaning these sizes. This process consists-of agitating the feed pulp with a small amount of reagents, usually 1.0 to 2 ½ lb. per ton of feed in the presence of water and air; the reagents help to form small bubbles that collect on the particles having a greater affinity for the bubble surface than for the water surface, in this case the fine coal, and the bubbles buoy these particles to the surface to form the frothor concentrate. Slate and shale particles remain wetted and suspended in the water to be drawn off as tailing. The frothers commonly used in coal flotation are cresylic acid, pine oil, and alcohols. More expensive frothers, used in ore flotation, work satisfactorily but do not compare with these cheaper reagents for over-all cost. Collectors- used are low-grade petroleum fractions, such as cheap, partly refined fuel oil, or lubricating oil, sometimes mixed with small amounts of kerosene. Other collectors used are the fatty acids and their
Citation

APA: C. P. Proctor Clare B. Carlson  (1943)  Froth Flotation Of Coal

MLA: C. P. Proctor Clare B. Carlson Froth Flotation Of Coal. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1943.

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