The Application Of Electric Drives For Large Ore Grinding Mills

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Walter H. Schwedes
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
61
File Size:
3397 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1972

Abstract

Ore grinding mills are really just slowly rotating barrels, but barrels that are growing in size so fast that the application of electric drives for them is rapidly approaching a technology like that for wind tunnels or pumped storage drives. This application is particularly worthy of care because some 40% of the 75 megawatts of power used by a large copper ore concentrator, or some 60% of the 200 megawatts supplied to a large iron ore concentrator, are for grinding. These ore plants are located where the ore is, not where a utility happens to be. So, the challenge is not only to choose a drive and .power transmission for reasonable cost, high performance, reliability and minimum maintenance, but to afford the interface between mill drive and power distribution and source systems to minimize the whole ore plant's monthly power bill, or costs of self generation. Conclusions can be reached in optimizing a drive selection only for each particular ore plant's set of parameters, but by identifying the criteria for selection and then weighting each type of drive per criteria, yardsticks for final choice become apparent. This is the purpose of this paper. Grinding action takes place inside the barrel, where the ore charge is ground with the aid of balls, or mill length rods, or large chunks of ore as in autogenous grinding.
Citation

APA: Walter H. Schwedes  (1972)  The Application Of Electric Drives For Large Ore Grinding Mills

MLA: Walter H. Schwedes The Application Of Electric Drives For Large Ore Grinding Mills. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1972.

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