Liquid-Solids Separation In Waste Treatment In The Mining Industry ? Conventional Techniques And New Concepts

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 10
- File Size:
- 511 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1971
Abstract
Waste treatment in the mining industry is by no means a new problem to this field. In a sense, the entire process from ore to finished product is one of waste treatment - the separation of a relatively minor quantity of desired component from valueless material. Where it has been necess-ary or economical to practice conventional waste treatment or pollution control methods, such as dust collection, water recovery from tailings, or impounding of residues for future treatment, this has been done. Generally the containment of hazardous pollutants such as arsenic and cyanide also has been followed in modern times. But it is only recently, with the public outcry for the elimination of all forms of pollution, "that the industry has been forced to solve what often appears to be a myriad of difficult and costly waste treatment problems, or be faced with the alternative of closing down the operation. It is the objective of this paper to describe new as well as conventional approaches to these problems, specifically as might be applicable to liquid-solids separation methods. Host wastes in the industry are present either as solutions or slurries, or can be most advantageously handled by conversion to this form, such as in scrubbing noxious gases and dusts with water. Separation of the solids and purification of the aqueous effluents are, therefore, often the principle problems.
Citation
APA:
(1971) Liquid-Solids Separation In Waste Treatment In The Mining Industry ? Conventional Techniques And New ConceptsMLA: Liquid-Solids Separation In Waste Treatment In The Mining Industry ? Conventional Techniques And New Concepts. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1971.