Determination of Iron Ore and Gangue Mineral Associations Using Optical and Backscattered Electron Images with Electron Probe Microanalysis

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
S Hapugoda
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
8
File Size:
10508 KB
Publication Date:
Jul 11, 2011

Abstract

Iron ore oxide and oxyhydroxide minerals such as haematite (eg various types of martite and microplaty haematite), different forms of goethite, magnetite, hydrohaematite and kenomagnetite were analysed using optical microscopy, scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and electron probe microanalysis (EPMA) techniques, to determine the type and proportion of deleterious elements present and the chemistry of associated gangue minerals. The aim was to characterise elements potentially deleterious for agglomeration and steelmaking, eg sulfur, phosphorus, aluminium and silicon and correlate their distribution with mineral texture and association, to provide feedback on downstream processing performance and product quality.Examples of characteristic mineral associations are shown from various genetic styles of iron ores, including magnetite banded iron formation (BIF), BIF-derived martite-goethite and skarn-type magnetite ores.A number of examples are presented demonstrating the benefits of the use of combined techniques of reflected optical microscopy, SEM and EPMA data to reliably identify ore and gangue minerals and their associations in different types of iron ores.
Citation

APA: S Hapugoda  (2011)  Determination of Iron Ore and Gangue Mineral Associations Using Optical and Backscattered Electron Images with Electron Probe Microanalysis

MLA: S Hapugoda Determination of Iron Ore and Gangue Mineral Associations Using Optical and Backscattered Electron Images with Electron Probe Microanalysis. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2011.

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