Abstract:
In a gravity separation device, particle shape, size and density all
play a role. The combination of these determines where each
individual particle reports to in the viscous fluid, where particle
crowding (solids to water ratio) also plays a role. To understand the
performance of gravity separation devices in the heavy mineral
industry, these particle characteristics need to be measured. There
are various challenges in analysing particle density and particle size
simultaneously for the purpose of quantifying gravity separator
performance, not to mention particle shape. These analytical
challenges include the high cost of high-density sink-float
fractionation, toxicity of high-density sink-float media, inability of
sink-float media to fractionate at densities greater than
4.0 g/cm3, and the time-intensive nature of these fractionations. The
use of the detailed particle-by-particle output from Qemscan®
particle mineral analyses (PMA) as a fast and cost-effective
alternative is evaluated. The size and density outputs from the
Qemscan® were employed to characterize the performance of a
heavy mineral spiral concentrator as an example. Critical analytical
requirements are to be addressed before the Qemscan® output data
can be utilized.
Description:
This paper was first presented at the, Heavy
Minerals Conference, ‘What next?’, 20–23
September 2009, Champagne Sport Resort,
Drakensberg.