Sodium Silicate As A Dispersant In The Selective Flocculation Of Iron Ores

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
S. V. Krishnan
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
10
File Size:
927 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1982

Abstract

In the upgrading of finely-disseminated iron ores, selective desliming is the critical step which must be controlled in order to achieve efficient flotation. A prerequisite for selective desliming is a properly-dispersed pulp; sodium silicate is commonly used as a dispersant. The mechanism by which sodium silicate acts as a dispersant in the presence of calcium ions was examined by streaming potential measurements, settling tests, abstraction density determinations, selective flocculation tests and scanning electron microscope observations. The study established that calcium silicate precipitates on the mineral surfaces dispersed the pulp. Although sodium silicate was a nonselective dispersant, the addition of corn starch aided the flocculation of goethite over quartz at low silicate additions, but became ineffective at higher silicate levels. A model is presented to explain the dispersant mechanism of sodium silicate in the presence of calcium ion for selective flocculation of iron ores.
Citation

APA: S. V. Krishnan  (1982)  Sodium Silicate As A Dispersant In The Selective Flocculation Of Iron Ores

MLA: S. V. Krishnan Sodium Silicate As A Dispersant In The Selective Flocculation Of Iron Ores. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1982.

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