Geometallurgical study of historical tungsten tailings for reprocessing – The Yxsjöberg case, J. Mulenshi, P. Khavari, S.C. Chelgani, and J. Rosenkranz

- Organization:
- The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 14
- File Size:
- 5423 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2020
Abstract
The geometallurgical concept has mainly been applied to primary ore deposits, starting from ore characterisation to the economic optimisation of the mining operation. However, as primary ore resources are becoming depleted and lower in grade, alternative sources need to be explored and a question of adaptability of the geometallurgical approach to the secondary resource repositories arises. The particle size distribution, chemical and mineralogical compositions of the Smaltjärnen historical tungsten tailings from physical separation in Yxsjöberg, Sweden were studied using drill core samples collected from different locations within the tailings repository in order to assess the amenability of the tailings to reprocessing. The tailings are dominated by the –600 to +149 μm particle size fraction. This fraction contains most of the elements of interest (W, Cu, S, Sn, Zn, Be, Bi and F) hosted by scheelite, chalcopyrite, pyrrhotite, cassiterite, danalite (both Zn and Be), bismuthinite and fluorite, respectively. The particle size distribution and mineralogical composition vary across the repository, suggesting a possible existence of geometallurgical domains, which require further assessment to evaluate metallurgical performance. Keywords: Historical tailings, tungsten, scheelite, geometallurgy, characterisation, mineralogy,
reprocessing
Citation
APA:
(2020) Geometallurgical study of historical tungsten tailings for reprocessing – The Yxsjöberg case, J. Mulenshi, P. Khavari, S.C. Chelgani, and J. RosenkranzMLA: Geometallurgical study of historical tungsten tailings for reprocessing – The Yxsjöberg case, J. Mulenshi, P. Khavari, S.C. Chelgani, and J. Rosenkranz. The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2020.