The Use of Horizontal to Improve the Effectiveness of Column Flotation of Coal
 
    
    - Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 7
- File Size:
- 433 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1993
Abstract
Horizontal perforated-plate baffles were shown to improve the cleaning  efficiency of a flotation column when processing coal from two sources.  The baffles consisted of flat plates with holes large enough to avoid  plugging problems, and they improved the washing efficiency by making  the flow patterns in the column closely approach plug flow. Tests with  varying amounts of baffle open area showed that the optimum was  between 30 and 40 per cent open area, which effectively prevented  backmixing without seriously reducing capacity. The baffled column had  previously been tested under ideal conditions with good results (87 per  cent pyrite rejection at 85 per cent combustiles recovery), and so the tests  reported here were intentionally run with difficult-to-float coals to  determine the benefits of baffling under adverse conditions. For an  original coal feed containing 38 per cent ash and 3.23 per cent total  sulphur, the baffled column could recover 84 per cent of the combustibles  while rejecting 84 per cent of the ash and approximately 54 per cent of  the pyritic sulphur. Without baffles, the column recovered 88 per cent of  the combustibles while rejecting only 76 per cent of the ash and 45 per  cent of the pyritic sulphur. Subsequent tests with a dye tracer showed that  the baffles reduced entrainment by approximately a factor of five, while  the recovery was reduced by only a few per cent. Overall, the loss of  capacity due to the baffles was more than offset by the improvement in  product quality.
Citation
APA: (1993) The Use of Horizontal to Improve the Effectiveness of Column Flotation of Coal
MLA: The Use of Horizontal to Improve the Effectiveness of Column Flotation of Coal. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1993.
