Froth Recovery Factor-What is it, And why is it so Difficult to Measure?

- Organization:
- Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
- Pages:
- 12
- File Size:
- 879 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2009
Abstract
The past twenty to thirty years have seen unprecedented research activity aimed at understanding the performance of flotation froths. In 1990, Finch and Dobby coined the term froth recovery factor, Rr, to represent the efficiency of the froth in delivering particles from the pulp-froth interface to the concentrate. Originally defined for flotation columns, Rr has also been found useful in modeling mechanical flotation cells, and a number of techniques, based on quite different approaches, have been developed for measuring the froth recovery in industrial flotation cells. None of these techniques is universally successful. This paper reviews the concept of the froth recovery factor, and the basis of each of the techniques that have been proposed to measure Rr, and examines the reasons for this parameter being so difficult to pin down. Advances in Mineral Processing Science and Technology Proceedings of the 48th Annual Conference of Metallurgists of CIM Sudbury, Ontario, Canada Edited by
Citation
APA:
(2009) Froth Recovery Factor-What is it, And why is it so Difficult to Measure?MLA: Froth Recovery Factor-What is it, And why is it so Difficult to Measure?. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2009.