Some Modern Methods in Milling of Industrial Minerals

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
R. K. Carnochan
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
6
File Size:
2295 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1939

Abstract

MANY improvements have been made in recent years in the milling of industrial minerals and it is the purpose of this paper to review some of the more important innovations that are now being used in the preparation of these products. Some of the observations which will be made have been prompted by what was seen on a recent trip to industrial mineral milling plants in the north and central sections of the eastern United States. The flotation plants visited were those of the Valley Forge Cement Company at West Conshohocken, Pa., the International Agricultural Corporation at Mount Pleasant, Tenn., and the Aluminum Ore Company at Rosiclare, Ill. Besides these, sand plants in Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and Ohio, coal-cleaning plants in Pennsylvania, pyrophyllite, mica, feldspar, clay, and kyanite plants in North Carolina, and a zinc mill and the Tennessee Valley Authority ceramic laboratory in Tennessee were visited. The milling of industrial minerals can be considered under three broad headings, namely, crushing, grinding, and purification. Usually there is both a separation and grinding problem in treating an industrial mineral, but the problems are distinct, although sometimes a separation is made while grinding, as in the case of a Raymond throw-out mill, which grinds and at the same time throws out most of any hard material present in its feed.
Citation

APA: R. K. Carnochan  (1939)  Some Modern Methods in Milling of Industrial Minerals

MLA: R. K. Carnochan Some Modern Methods in Milling of Industrial Minerals. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1939.

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