Minerals Beneficiation - The Influence of the Environment on the Comminution of Quartz

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
I. J. Lin A. Mitzmager
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
7
File Size:
1674 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1969

Abstract

This paper describes a series of experiments conducted to determine how the physicochemical properties of the suspending fluid affect the size reduction of quartz in a ball mill. Particular attention was directed toward the differences in rate of grinding and particle size distributions when either polar or non-polar fluids were the suspending liquids. Grinding was performed with water, carbon tetrachloride and methylcyclohexane as the liquids, and also in nitrogen for comparative purposes. From the results ob- tained, the authors have concluded that the presence of water greatly enhances efficiency in the grinding of quartz. Comminution is generally regarded as a purely physical process in which fragmentation of a solid is obtained by the application of suitable forces. In 1944, however, Rehbinder et al.1 pioneered the idea that the interfacial forces between the solid and the media plays an important role in comminution. Since then, a number of researches have shown conclusively that comminution is affected by surface chemical phenomena,2-5 and Gaudin went as far as to compare comminution to a chemical reaction.6 The effect of the viscosity and the density of the fluid media in grinding was also investigated, but
Citation

APA: I. J. Lin A. Mitzmager  (1969)  Minerals Beneficiation - The Influence of the Environment on the Comminution of Quartz

MLA: I. J. Lin A. Mitzmager Minerals Beneficiation - The Influence of the Environment on the Comminution of Quartz. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1969.

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