Promising Options for Solving the Dolomite Problem of the Florida Phosphate Resources—a Brief Review Mining, Metallurgy and Exploration

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 0
- File Size:
- 835 KB
- Publication Date:
Abstract
Separation of dolomite from phosphate is the most challenging problem in phosphate mineral processing. Over 50% of the future
phosphate reserve in Florida contains too much dolomite to process using the current industry practice. The current phosphoric
acid production practice requires less than 1% MgO in the phosphate concentrate as the feed material. The Florida Industrial and
Phosphate (FIPR) Institute has collaborated with worldwide experts in the field to address this issue. As a result, the industry is
now offered three feasible options. Option 1 offers three methods for reducing MgO content in the concentrate from the Crago
process, including adding a dolomite depressant in the rougher flotation step, dolomite flotation of the cleaner concentrate, and
scrubbing the cleaner concentrate in quartz sand. These methods could reduce MgO content in the final concentrate by 20–40%.
Option 2 involves crushing and grinding of high-dolomite phosphate pebbles followed by dolomite flotation at slightly acidic pH
using a new collector that does not require phosphoric acid as a phosphate depressant, achieving a final concentrate analyzing less
than 0.9% MgO at about 87% P2O5 recovery. Option 3 is a gravity separation technique using an innovative separation jig, and its
full potential remains to be demonstrated.
Citation
APA:
Promising Options for Solving the Dolomite Problem of the Florida Phosphate Resources—a Brief Review Mining, Metallurgy and ExplorationMLA: Promising Options for Solving the Dolomite Problem of the Florida Phosphate Resources—a Brief Review Mining, Metallurgy and Exploration. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration,