SAG Mill Operation at Cortez: Evolution of Liner Design from Current to Future Operations

- Organization:
- Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
- Pages:
- 30
- File Size:
- 2313 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2007
Abstract
"The Cortez SAG mill liner design was recently modified to improve the mill operating energy efficiency. In addition to the expected benefits, the design change unexpectedly played a significant role of verifying the proposed grinding circuit expansion for the Cortez Hills project as well as illustrating current SAG mill bottlenecks. This paper will discuss the evaluation that addressed operator and maintenance observations, historical PLC data, and “crash stop” observations to calculate charge motion, packing between lifters, and slurry transport through grate and pulp lifters. The performance of the new shell and discharge end liner design will also be discussed as well as their role in the possible grinding circuit expansion.INTRODUCTIONCortez Gold Mines commenced operation in 1969 with its Mill #1 rated at a nominal 2,000 tons per day. Mill #1 was a conventional rod mill/ball mill circuit followed by an 8-stage CIP circuit. In the early 1990s the Pipeline deposit was discovered and subsequently Mill #2 was built to process the increased ore volume. Mill #2, commissioned by mid-1997, was a nominal 10,000 tons per day SABC circuit followed by an 8-stage CIL circuit for oxide gold ore. Operating and commissioning details of this plant have been published elsewhere (Powell, 1998). By late 1998, there was not enough ore volume to support both mills so the smaller, higher operating cost Mill #1 was put under its current care-and-maintenance status. A simplified flowsheet of the current mill is shown in Figure 1."
Citation
APA:
(2007) SAG Mill Operation at Cortez: Evolution of Liner Design from Current to Future OperationsMLA: SAG Mill Operation at Cortez: Evolution of Liner Design from Current to Future Operations. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2007.