Papers - Crushing and Grinding - Crushing and Grinding Characteristics as Determined from Screen Analyses

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Fred C. Bond Walter L. Maxson
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
15
File Size:
542 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1935

Abstract

There is more information contained in a screen analysis than is ordinarily recognized, and there is an increasing need for methods of making this additional information easily available. As more comprehensive studies of crushing and grinding are made, and as the possibilities of decreased expense and increased extraction through a closer control of grinding are explored, methods of interpreting screen analyses assume an importance which they have not had heretofore. The information commonly desired, which can be determined from a complete and carefully made screen analysis, includes: (1) the size distribution of the material passing the finest screen, (2) the presence of a hard grinding fraction, (3) the location of natural grain sizes, (4) the presence of different materials with markedly different grinding characteristics, (5) the presence and amount of finely divided material such as clay, which is merely unlocked in grinding, and (6) the total surface area of the ground product. It is necessary to know the fundamental law of size distribution of a homogeneous material in order to correctly resolve a screen-analysis curve, and to understand the variations and anomalies that a sample may exhibit when compared with the ideal curve. This fundamental law was developed by Gaudin,1 who showed that when the logarithm of the per cent weight retained on any screen and passing the next larger screen in the Tyler standard screen scale was plotted against the logarithm of the screen aperture the resulting curve for the finer sizes of a homogeneous crusher or grinding-mill product would be a straight line. Gross and Zimmerley2 experimentally confirmed Rittinger's law, which states that the useful work done in crushing a homogeneous material is directly proportional to the new surface area produced; and showed that in the larger screen sizes resulting from impact crushing a
Citation

APA: Fred C. Bond Walter L. Maxson  (1935)  Papers - Crushing and Grinding - Crushing and Grinding Characteristics as Determined from Screen Analyses

MLA: Fred C. Bond Walter L. Maxson Papers - Crushing and Grinding - Crushing and Grinding Characteristics as Determined from Screen Analyses. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1935.

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