Split-Feed Circuit Design for Primary Sulfide Recovery

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Michael J. Mankosa Jaisen N. Kohmuench Gerald H. Luttrell John A. Herbst Aaron Noble
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
11
File Size:
3393 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2016

Abstract

The HydroFloat TM is an innovative fluidized-bed separator that can substantially increase the upper particle size that can be successfully treated by flotation. Recent studies conducted using laboratory, bench-scale and pilot-scale equipment indicate that this technology can be used to float coarse sulfide middlings that cannot be recovered by conventional flotation machines. Recent data collected from pilotscale tests conducted at a base metal concentrator indicate that this technology can float middlings particles as large as 850 microns in diameter containing as little as 1% exposed hydrophobic mineral. As such, the crossover of this technology into the base metals industry has the potential to substantially reduce grinding costs and increase concentrator recovery/capacity through the use of split-feed circuitry. The split-feed concept, which is often used for upgrading industrial minerals, involves segregation of the feed into more than one size class followed by subsequent upgrading using mills/separators/reagents specifically optimized for each size class. In this article, a split-feed circuit is described that utilizes two stages of classifying cyclones in conjunction with the HydroFloat_ separator. The circuit is designed to recover, recycle and regrind coarse middlings containing small amounts of valuable mineral while simultaneously rejecting coarse well-liberated siliceous gangue so that mill throughput can be increased. Simulation data conducted using well-known process models suggest that this approach can increase existing primary mill capacity by up to 25% with only modest investments in new classifying and flotation equipment.
Citation

APA: Michael J. Mankosa Jaisen N. Kohmuench Gerald H. Luttrell John A. Herbst Aaron Noble  (2016)  Split-Feed Circuit Design for Primary Sulfide Recovery

MLA: Michael J. Mankosa Jaisen N. Kohmuench Gerald H. Luttrell John A. Herbst Aaron Noble Split-Feed Circuit Design for Primary Sulfide Recovery. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2016.

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