The Effect Of Froth Sprinkling On Coal Flotation Efficiency ? Introduction And Summary

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
F. G. Miller
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
28
File Size:
1018 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1968

Abstract

To improve coal flotation Bethlehem Steel Corporation's Research Department has been working on a number of related problems based on both physical and chemical factors. The ideal is of course full understanding of the interrelated effects of both sets of factors. However, detailed studies5 of each physical factor have produced immediately usable results in commercial coal flotation and are providing the bas is for our current work on the effect of chemical factors. Since these detailed studies provided the basis for the present investigation of froth sprinkling, their key results are highlighted here. For example, for a highly floatable bituminous coal, particle floatability was shown to be directly related to the percentage of coal surface available for bubble attachment and inversely related to particle mass. The data also underscored that in a given size range the addition of mineral matter to a particle makes flotation more difficult both by adding to the mass of the particle and by decreasing the amount of coal surface available for bubble attachment. Size also affects particle floatability in that as the size of particles of a given specific gravity increases, mass increases and the ratio between coal surface area and mass of the particle decreases. Flotation tests showed that any recovery of the coarsest particles in a coal feed is accompanied by progressively higher recovery of finer and finer particles. Consequently, fine high-specific-gravity particles are recovered with the coarse good coal. As a result, when the entire 14M x 0 size range is processed by froth flotation, the good coarse coal is contaminated with high-specific-gravity fines. It is the small quantities of these fines that must be rejected from the froth product if flotation efficiency is to be increased above its present level.
Citation

APA: F. G. Miller  (1968)  The Effect Of Froth Sprinkling On Coal Flotation Efficiency ? Introduction And Summary

MLA: F. G. Miller The Effect Of Froth Sprinkling On Coal Flotation Efficiency ? Introduction And Summary. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1968.

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