Reserve Mining Company Pelletizing •Practice

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Kenneth M. Haley
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
5
File Size:
2407 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1961

Abstract

THE development of Reserve Mining Company's pelletizing practices began in 1949 in a pilot plant located at Ashland, Kentucky. Three years later the participating companies -Armco Steel Corporation, Cleveland Cliffs Iron Mining Company and Republic Steel Corporation concluded the work and the small plant was shut down. Oglebay Norton and Company was the operating manager and Armco Steel Corporation furnished labor and services. Arthur G. McKee and Company were the designers and constructors. The equipment flow sheet that was employed in that pilot operation is shown in Figure 1. This was Reserve's first step from the laboratory work per-formed by the Mines Experiment Station of the University of Minnesota in developing a commercial operation. The plant used New York state concentrate, purchased from Jones and Laughlin Steel Corporation's Benson Mine. This concentrate, minus 14 mesh, 64.3 per cent Fe, 5.7 per cent Si02, was processed at Ashland to 80 per cent minus 325 mesh in conventional ball mill, classifier, thickener, filtering
Citation

APA: Kenneth M. Haley  (1961)  Reserve Mining Company Pelletizing •Practice

MLA: Kenneth M. Haley Reserve Mining Company Pelletizing •Practice. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1961.

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