Sea Water Flotation

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
L. D. Haig
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
19
File Size:
521 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1974

Abstract

"The Texada Mill is a unique iron operation producing High Grade sinter iron concentrate and a by-product copper, gold, silver concentrate. The plant is complex and extremely flexible to handle the many varieties of ore. Two iron concentrates are made and blended. A coarse iron concentrate from primary grinding and a fine concentrate after rougher flotation to remove all the sulphides.All the tailings from iron processing are collected, dewatered, reground and floated for additional copper recovery.The entire milling operation has been carried out in all sea water for seven years and mixtures of sea, fresh, and reclaimed water for ten years prior to that.A very stable float results from the use of sea water at the natural pH8. Reagent Consumption is lower and Metallic Corrosion of mill liners and grinding media is actually less than local fresh water or mixtures of fresh and sea water.Marine growth in pipe lines can be periodically removed by violently bubbling high pressure air up through the water filled mains.Location:Texada Mines is located on tide water on the west side of Texada Island 100 miles northwest of Vancouver, B. C.The Island is served by a 30 car ferry, tug and barge and a scheduled air service from Vancouver to a company maintained air strip near the mine.The climate is moderate with about 30 inches of rain during the winter and relatively dry summers."
Citation

APA: L. D. Haig  (1974)  Sea Water Flotation

MLA: L. D. Haig Sea Water Flotation. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1974.

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