Quartz - Gangue Or Mineral - The Effect Of Temperature On Its Electrostatic Separation

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Harry Leslie Bullock
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
10
File Size:
1259 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1967

Abstract

With silica making up more than 27% of the earth's crust, its oxides amounting to more than 59% of the igneous rocks and quartz the most prevalent of the main free oxides, it follows that the mining engineer' is in constant contact with quartz, mainly as a gangue material to be removed as completely and economically as possible and sometimes as a valuable mineral to be purified' for the chemical,, ceramic or glass industries. Water scarcity under desert or semi-arid conditions, dwindling water supplies and difficulties of wet waste disposal in many locations and trouble from freezing in arctic locations make dry benefication more and more desirable. Advances made during the last few years in apparatus and methods and a steadily increasing knowledge of solid state physics are widening the field open to the economical application of electrostatic separation.
Citation

APA: Harry Leslie Bullock  (1967)  Quartz - Gangue Or Mineral - The Effect Of Temperature On Its Electrostatic Separation

MLA: Harry Leslie Bullock Quartz - Gangue Or Mineral - The Effect Of Temperature On Its Electrostatic Separation. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1967.

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