RI 2933 Effect Of Sieve Motion On Screening Efficiency ? Introduction

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 18
- File Size:
- 8231 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1929
Abstract
The purpose of screening is to separate a crushed or natural product into one or more products in which size of grain is constant, or within certain size limits. The ore dresser finds need for this operation in the laboratory, in the study of ore-dressing processes, and for various purposes in the plants. In the plant, for example, screens are employed in closed circuit with crushing devices such as rolls, and sometimes are used in closed circuit with ball mills. Screens are generally used to prepare jig feed where a sized feed is wanted. For any given sieve opening there is in any feed a certain percentage of grains that will pass through the sieve meshes only with difficulty and under favorable conditions. For example, cylindrical grains of length greater than the maximum dimension of the sieve mesh and of diameter less than the sieve opening pass the sieve only when the long axis of the grain is normal or nearly normal to the sieve. Whether such grains should actually be in the through's or the oversize of a screening operation--considered from the point of view of the subsequent treatment of the grains--can not be said. The grains that pass the sieve opening in a screening process only under-favorable conditions have been named "difficult" grains by R. K. Warner.4 In many ore-dressing flow-sheets it probably matters little whether these difficult grains show up in the screen through's or oversize. The main objection to them is that they are sieve-blinding.
Citation
APA:
(1929) RI 2933 Effect Of Sieve Motion On Screening Efficiency ? IntroductionMLA: RI 2933 Effect Of Sieve Motion On Screening Efficiency ? Introduction. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1929.