Commission Asarco’s Ray Expansion

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Patrick J. Coughlin
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
4
File Size:
995 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1994

Abstract

Shortly after Asarco Inc. purchased the Ray Mines Division from Kennecott in 1986, the company began an expansion program to increase copper production. The Bechtel Corp. oversaw engineering procurement and construction management for a new in-pit crusher, overland conveyor system and concentrator facility. Construction started in May 1990 on these facets of the expansion project. The concentrator was commissioned in February 1992. The Ray concentrator uses a single-line, semiautogenous grinding circuit (SAG) with a design through¬put of 27 kt/d (30,000 stpd). In the early 1960s, Kennecott conducted pilot plant grind tests of Ray mine ores to determine their amenability to SAG and autogenous grinding methods. Those tests, though, were not followed up. During 1973 and 1982, Kennecott conducted additional pilot testing on some of the softer ore types. In 1989, Asarco ran a final series of SAG pilot grinding tests at Lakefield Research, which became the basis of the new Ray concentrator grinding circuit. Even though pilot test work demonstrated that some of the Ray ores gave satisfactory results during the autogenous grinding tests, the SAG option was selected for the primary comminution device. Due to the wide range of mineralogies encountered in the Ray ore body, selective mining and blending of these ores would be required to achieve the necessary production efficiencies and throughput rates using an autogenous grinding circuit.
Citation

APA: Patrick J. Coughlin  (1994)  Commission Asarco’s Ray Expansion

MLA: Patrick J. Coughlin Commission Asarco’s Ray Expansion. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1994.

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