Improving The Performance Of Minerals Beneficiation Plants ? I. General Principles - Introduction

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 34
- File Size:
- 2577 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1967
Abstract
Rising demand, artificial market conditions, increased overseas competition, and a fluctuating international situation have brought ever increasing pressures to bear on the nonferrous metals industries, and particularly in the United States, Although capacity is being expanded by the construction of new plants and the development of new ore deposits, increasing attention is being focused on the possibilities of improving the performance of the existing installations and of getting the most out of the new equipment now installed. At first sight the task appears formidable. Based on raw materials which are nonhomogeneous, and possessing characteristics which are hard to quantify, even the processes by which the values in the ores are concentrated and extracted are in many cases not fully understood. The necessary analytical equipment and transducers demanded by these industries have also been slow in development and their earlier absence has hampered the application of modern control technology, This is reflected in plants which have been designed for ease of manual rather than automatic control, and in which the application of control techniques at first sight appears economically prohibitive. However, in any industry progress often comes only in small steps, It may be that by the wise choice of limited objectives and perhaps only partial solutions, substantial improvements in plant performance can be implemented now, and with only a modest investment. If modern control equipment is chosen of the type which can be reprogrammed, advantage can be taken later of more sophisticated solutions as the technology of the industry advances. This task of improving plant performance can and must be commenced even though our knowledge is incomplete. The experience of a related mineral consuming industry, with similar problems in the past, can be encouraging.
Citation
APA:
(1967) Improving The Performance Of Minerals Beneficiation Plants ? I. General Principles - IntroductionMLA: Improving The Performance Of Minerals Beneficiation Plants ? I. General Principles - Introduction. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1967.