RI 4071 Benefication of Western Beryl Ores

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
H. D. Snedden H. L. Bibbs
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
20
File Size:
1363 KB
Publication Date:
May 1, 1947

Abstract

"INTRODUCTION The use of beryllium and its alloys has increased rapidly during the last decade. Further expansion of its use is limited; in part, by lack of adequately developed ore reserves. The principal commercial beryllium mineral is beryl, which is found chiefly in pegmatites and produced for market as a byproduct of the mica and feldspar industries. The coarse beryl is mined selectively, sobbed and sorted by hand, and then sold without further beneficiation. The known reserves of coarse beryl are small. No method has been available for concentrating small disseminated beryl crystals, so ores of this type have not been mined or have been left on waste dumps. Disseminated ore in low-grade unmined areas and waste dumps on developed properties is a potential source of beryl, provided a method is developed for its beneficiation.Published literature on the concentration of beryl is lacking in detail or deals chiefly with tests on artificial mixtures of pure minerals, and procedures as given were not applicable to the beryl ores tested at the Salt Lake Station. The testing procedures described in this report are independent developments. By employing these procedures, beryl was satisfactorily con¬centrated from several run-of-mine and dump ores, although these ores wore low in grade and part of the contained beryl was finely crystalline and disseminated.Beryl, quartz, and feldspar, when ground to flotation sizes, are so alike in color and general appearance that they cannot he distinguished by visual observation. The progress of the work depended on rapid determination of the grade of test products by means of the petrographic microscope. Small samples of concentrates and tailings were often cut after each addition of reagents, dried, and examined under the microscope."
Citation

APA: H. D. Snedden H. L. Bibbs  (1947)  RI 4071 Benefication of Western Beryl Ores

MLA: H. D. Snedden H. L. Bibbs RI 4071 Benefication of Western Beryl Ores. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1947.

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