Mineral Processing—Responding to Economic and Environmental Pressures

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Edward Martinez M. E. Tawil N. W. Johnson G. V. Jergensen A. English M. P. Amsden Harrison Copper L. A. Haas D. Halbe C. C. Harris
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
11
File Size:
1798 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 5, 1980

Abstract

Declining US ore grades along with skyrocketing energy, materials, labor, and regulatory costs underscored the urgency for technological innovation in the mineral processing area. Re¬liance on the scale-up and automation of unit operations was the sector's primary battle plan. Debate continues on the upper size limit of concentrating plants and whether process controls should be centralized or distributed in the mill. In the materials handling area, the economics of large-scale and mobile systems, particularly conveyors, were well documented in the literature. Comminution, the most costly and energy consuming area of the processing flowsheet, saw improvements in process controls and liner designs. The trend toward larger grinding units stalled somewhat during the year owing to some operational problems at commercial plants. Research and development of apparently less expensive physical separation processes-that also boast recovery of cleaner and more environmentally acceptable products -gained momentum during the year. Because of escalating capital cost requirements for new plant capacity, the year saw a greater interest by mill designers to re-examine existing capacity. The focus here is clearly to modify or retrofit unit operations with more efficient components as an alternative to installing more costly new equipment. The problems facing the processing sector during the 1970s can be expected to continue in the decade ahead. Technological gains from scale-up and process controls appear
Citation

APA: Edward Martinez M. E. Tawil N. W. Johnson G. V. Jergensen A. English M. P. Amsden Harrison Copper L. A. Haas D. Halbe C. C. Harris  (1980)  Mineral Processing—Responding to Economic and Environmental Pressures

MLA: Edward Martinez M. E. Tawil N. W. Johnson G. V. Jergensen A. English M. P. Amsden Harrison Copper L. A. Haas D. Halbe C. C. Harris Mineral Processing—Responding to Economic and Environmental Pressures. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1980.

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