Lime in Base-Metal Flotation

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
E. H. Rose
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
4
File Size:
1542 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1939

Abstract

THE most useful guide to the role of lime in flotation is the view that the chemistry of any flotation operation is primarily a pattern in relative solubilities. We have the coming together of a number of minerals, reagents, fortuitous salts, water, and oxygen, many of which have not been previously in contact with each other, and every one of which is free, at least to some extent, to abandon old alliances and to form new ones. Of one thing the operator may be sure, and that is that, when equilibrium has been reached, those new chemical combinations will have formed which are the least soluble combinations possible to the environment. The laws of solution govern the operation, which means that relative concentrations are always a factor, and temperature frequently is. What the operator is really doing when he chooses his reagents .in the first place (empirically or otherwise) and works out their? optimum amounts, is to provide an environment in which (1) the least soluble possible compound of the mineral he desires to float is one which is also non-wettable, while at the same time (2) the least soluble compounds possible to the minerals he desires to depress are wettable. Since all metathesis is reversible, perfection is impossible to achieve, and the operator is constantly striving to establish that combination of concentrations which will drive each and every particular reaction as far as possible in the direction he desires it to go, in accordance with the law of molar concentration.
Citation

APA: E. H. Rose  (1939)  Lime in Base-Metal Flotation

MLA: E. H. Rose Lime in Base-Metal Flotation. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1939.

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