Optimising blend ratios, grinds, and reagent schemes to recover platinum group metals from lower group reef spiral tailings

The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
T. L. Moodley I. Govender S. Pikinini J. Sehata J. Tshilongo M. Raedani
Organization:
The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
5
File Size:
1684 KB
Publication Date:
Mar 6, 2026

Abstract

In the face of dwindling Merensky ore reserves in the early 1990s, Mintek developed the MF2 flotation circuit to economically recover platinum group metals from the shallow upper group-2 chromitite reef. By aligning the primary and secondary grind to the platinum group metal liberation kinetics, excessive fine chromite generation was avoided, and thus one could consistently produce high-grade concentrates (>200 g/t platinum group metals) with low chrome content (<3% Cr2O₃), well within smelter tolerances. This, coupled with upper group- 2's low-cost open-pit mining, made it particularly attractive to investors and mining houses alike. As a result, deeper lying reefs like middle group and lower group with lower platinum group metals grades and complex mineralogy, were primarily mined only for chromite using density-based separation processes (like spirals), of which the waste tailings are best classified as secondary platinum group metals resources. Today, with global platinum group metal demand rising and high grade upper ground-2 reserves rapidly diminishing, the industry must revisit these middle group and lower group tailings. Mineralogical analysis reveals several challenges: Middle group tailings feature platinum group metals locked within silicate matrices, while lower group tailings contain fine chromitite fragments, and are hosted within non-floating laurite grains, each presenting liberation and gangue issues. Smelter constraints still demand concentrates below 3% Cr₂O₃, requiring solutions that consider both platinum group metals recovery and chrome entrainment. To develop a solution, two lower group chrome spiral tailings samples were obtained from a large chrome mine: Sample A (+425 μm – 106 μm) and Sample B (−106 μm). Initial assays showed Sample B contained higher platinum group metal grades but also higher Cr₂O₃. As such, different blends of flotation feeds were evaluated using ratios of 90:10 (C1) and 80:20 (C2) of Sample A to Sample B, targeting the coarse fraction's lower chrome content while recovering valuable platinum group metals from the fines. This work proposes a practical route for mining houses to unlock additional platinum group metal value from lower group ore spiral tailings. By optimising blending ratios and reagent suites, it is possible to meet smelter chrome and platinum group metal grade thresholds, whilst still obtaining economically viable PGM recoveries.
Citation

APA: T. L. Moodley I. Govender S. Pikinini J. Sehata J. Tshilongo M. Raedani  (2026)  Optimising blend ratios, grinds, and reagent schemes to recover platinum group metals from lower group reef spiral tailings

MLA: T. L. Moodley I. Govender S. Pikinini J. Sehata J. Tshilongo M. Raedani Optimising blend ratios, grinds, and reagent schemes to recover platinum group metals from lower group reef spiral tailings. The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2026.

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