RI 7314 Production Of Metallic Concentrates From High-Silica Iron Ores

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
H. D. Jacobs
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
20
File Size:
1530 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1969

Abstract

The Bureau of Mines developed a concentration method to upgrade and utilize marginal natural or direct-shipping iron ores and fine-grained lean iron ores. Presently these ores receive little beneficiation and accordingly have low iron-silica (Fe-Si02) ratios. Ore samples were roasted with equal weights of solid reductant at 1,100° C for 1 hour to metallize the iron and for an additional hour at 1,200° C to promote grain growth. Concentration was effected by crushing and screening techniques and/or wet magnetic separation. Sized concentrates (minus 4 plus 35 mesh) derived from crushing-screening processes contained from 80 to 85 percent iron that was 90 percent metallized. Iron-silica ratios as high as 12:1 and iron recoveries from 75 to 94 percent were obtained. The sized concentrates were judged suitable for use as blast furnace feed. Minus 200-mesh metallized concentrates derived from roasted minus I-inch plus 8-mesh ore fractions and magnetically concentrated contained 90 percent Fe and 4 percent or less Si02, chemically qualifying them as feed for electric furnaces. Roasting minus 8-mesh ore with hydrogen, then magnetically concentrating it, produced iron concentrates containing 57 percent to 67 percent Fe and 3.6 percent to 8.4 percent Si02. The concentrates having Fe-Si02 ratios ranging from 8:1 to 12:1 were considered adequate for use as blast furnace feed. Overall iron recoveries for the 12 ores tested ranged from 56 percent to 94 percent with an average iron recovery of 86 percent.
Citation

APA: H. D. Jacobs  (1969)  RI 7314 Production Of Metallic Concentrates From High-Silica Iron Ores

MLA: H. D. Jacobs RI 7314 Production Of Metallic Concentrates From High-Silica Iron Ores. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1969.

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