Fine and Coarse Iron Ore Beneficiation - An Evaluation into Global Technologies and Techniques

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
L M. van Niekerk
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
15
File Size:
228 KB
Publication Date:
Jul 15, 2013

Abstract

The mining of iron ore is a high volume low margin business because the value of this commodity is significantly lower than that of base metals. The main metallurgical challenges in most of the iron ore projects proposed for treatment nowadays have been in finding the optimum flowsheet for the treatment of magnetite ores, mixed magnetite-hematite ores and even ores that have banded ironstone formations (BIF). The associated plant designs incorporate very high capacity milling systems to grind the ore down prior to magnetic separation and in being highly capital intensive requires substantial investment in mega processing plants with associated infrastructure to mill down the run-of-mine ore to the desired treatment size for upgrading.To minimise the cost of infrastructure, better beneficiation techniques and technologies are being sought to assist in reducing upfront ROM feed to allow for reduction in overall treatment plant footprint necessary in extracting the desired downstream product. This paper discusses such beneficiation techniques and advancement in technologies for the upgrading of coarse and fine iron ore utilising dense media separation (DMS), jigging, wet magnetic separation, dry magnetic separation, flotation and x-ray processing.Another group of iron ore projects involve the mining of hematite ore below the water table. Often the mined ore is wet and sticky. This combination requires high capacity processing of feed material utilising large scrubbers or attritioning units to effectively remove the slimes component present in the feedstock. The fines removed, usually below 1 mm, are then discarded in large tailings storage facilities. Approaches to recovering the saleable material contained within these fines will also be investigated in this paper. This not only implies possible reduction in slimes discard footprint, but also holds potential benefit in augmenting overall yield and recovery of hematite product.CITATION:van Niekerk, L M, 2013. Fine and coarse iron ore beneficiation - An evaluation into global technologies and techniques, in Proceedings MetPlant 2013 , pp 584-598 (The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy: Melbourne).
Citation

APA: L M. van Niekerk  (2013)  Fine and Coarse Iron Ore Beneficiation - An Evaluation into Global Technologies and Techniques

MLA: L M. van Niekerk Fine and Coarse Iron Ore Beneficiation - An Evaluation into Global Technologies and Techniques. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2013.

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