Bulk sensing for effective ore sorting – learnings over 35 years

- Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 10
- File Size:
- 991 KB
- Publication Date:
- Nov 10, 2020
Abstract
The potential for bulk diversion was identified and quickly implemented following the development of
bulk sensing technologies applied to conveyed flows. In the early 1980s real time analysis of ash in
coal was intended to improve the understanding and control of quality variability. By the end of the
1980s approximately 5% of coal analysers installed were being utilised for bulk sorting; diverting
flows to create stockpiles to improve blending flexibility and boiler feed consistency, diverting waste
material, or bypassing the beneficiation process when the coal met product quality criteria.
In the 1990s bulk sensing and sorting utilising natural gamma detection was applied to conveyed
waste in gold-uranium mineralisation and allowed ore to be recovered and processed that would
otherwise have been discarded. Further applications developed in the iron ore sector where product
quality ore could be diverted to bypass beneficiation and save significant unnecessary processing
costs and improve recovery by avoiding process inefficiency losses. Plant capacity was freed up to
be utilised by material that required processing.
Similar benefits became evident in the phosphate industry and in base metals where multi-elemental
analysis using Prompt Gamma Neutron Activation Analysis provides ideal opportunities to
representatively measure 30 second conveyed increments at high accuracies. This has been
successfully adopted in copper, nickel, platinum and lead-zinc to improve waste removal after
primary crushing to eliminate unnecessary expense and improve plant efficiency. The benefits
include increased output from existing operating capacity, significant reductions in consumable costs
and generation of fewer detrimental waste streams.
The paper outlines the technologies and discusses case studies covering the above commodities,
demonstrating the immense value that representative real time measurement of conveyed flows can
create. Measurement data concurrently provides multiple benefits in operational performance
besides sorting, through ore reconciliation, ore blending, feedforward control and metal accounting,
adding further value.
Citation
APA:
(2020) Bulk sensing for effective ore sorting – learnings over 35 yearsMLA: Bulk sensing for effective ore sorting – learnings over 35 years. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2020.