A New Potential Standard in Monitoring and Optimizing Deposit Control in Mining Process Waters

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
W. J. González
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
6
File Size:
574 KB
Publication Date:
Feb 23, 2014

Abstract

With the increasing demand for minerals and the decline in the quality of ore reserves, technologies to maximize recovery are critical to a mine?s economic success. Many mining waters exhibit the potential to form hardness-based inorganic scales, which inhibit effective mineral recovery. Often, a continuously-fed chemical deposit control program is implemented by the mine site to inhibit these scales. The use of retractable scale coupons is the current industry standard for monitoring these programs; however, a key drawback to their use is the limited, and sometimes untimely amount of information they provide. A proprietary fouling analyzer has been developed that can be used to continuously monitor the formation of inorganic scales in mining process streams. Consequently, it can be used to continually, and more effectively, communicate the efficacy of an antiscalant program, thereby providing the ability to compare different scale control programs and to optimize their feedrates. Case studies presented validate the applicability of this technology to help optimize mineral recovery.
Citation

APA: W. J. González  (2014)  A New Potential Standard in Monitoring and Optimizing Deposit Control in Mining Process Waters

MLA: W. J. González A New Potential Standard in Monitoring and Optimizing Deposit Control in Mining Process Waters. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2014.

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