Nonmetallic Minerals - Magnetic Beneficiation of Nonmetallics (With Discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Samuel Gibson Frantz G. W. Jarman
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
9
File Size:
494 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1932

Abstract

The purpose of this paper is to relate briefly the development of magnetic separation and its extension from the separation of iron into its present use in the nonmetallic field, to suggest possible future extensions of its field of usefulness and its possible cooperation with other separating methods. The engineering design of separating machines, and statistics as to the number of machines in operation, types, their location and production are outside the scope of this paper. Specific data will be given, however, on certain selected applications. A large part of human endeavor consists in separating one thing from another; the good from the bad, the desired from the undesired. In fact, a philosopher might plausibly claim that separating things into categories and choosing between them is the object of thought itself. In dealing with matter, separation is nowhere more inherently necessary to attain our objects than in mining and metallurgy. Both our desire and our ability to make separations are results of the physical differences between things. Gross separations such as removing ore from worthless rock or coal from slate are usually made visually and depend upon form and color, which are physical properties. When the desired and the undesired things are intimately mixed, however, it becomes impractical to select visually even if the individual particles are readily recognizable to the eye, and some automatic way of making the particles separate themselves on the basis of their own inherent differences in physical properties must be resorted to. Some of the physical properties which have been used as a basis of separation are: color, shape, hardness, size, density, elasticity, surface propertics (surface tension in contact with liquids, etc.), electrical conductivity, dielectric constant, and magnetic susceptibility. Differences in these properties are used in the following methods of separation: color sorting, sifting, settlement in air and in liquids, float-sink methods, flotation, electrostatic and magnetic separation.
Citation

APA: Samuel Gibson Frantz G. W. Jarman  (1932)  Nonmetallic Minerals - Magnetic Beneficiation of Nonmetallics (With Discussion)

MLA: Samuel Gibson Frantz G. W. Jarman Nonmetallic Minerals - Magnetic Beneficiation of Nonmetallics (With Discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1932.

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