Chapter 26 - Mineral Processing
Number Topic Rule of Thumb
26.01 General A concentrator (mill) requires up to 3 tons of water for each ton of ore processed.  It is therefore important to operate with the maximum practical pulp density and minimum practical upward or horizontal movement.  The basic philosophy requires movement over the shortest possible distances between processing units and makes use of gravity to save on power consumption.  Source: Wayne Gould 
26.02 General In the arid climates, mills operate with less than one ton of new water for each ton of ore processed.  The balance of the process water required is recovered from dewatering concentrate, thickening the tails, and re-circulation from tailing ponds.  Source: Norman Weiss
26.03 General A mill at the mine (and related facilities) accounts for approximately 85% of the total electrical power consumption for an open pit operation, but only about 45% for a typical underground mine.  Source: Alan O’Hara
26.04 General For a typical underground mine, the cost for electrical power for the mill (concentrator) will be approximately 35% of the total electrical power cost for the mine.  Source: Fred Nabb
26.05 General The minimum slope of concrete floors in the mill is 3/8 inch/foot (3%), more around grinding mills where slurry spills can be frequent events.  Source: Bob Shoemaker
26.06 General Each hour of downtime in a mill is equivalent to a 4% decrease in recovery that day.  Source: Bob Shoemaker
26.07 General A mill built entirely of second-hand equipment and controls may be constructed for half the cost of one built “all new” with state-of-the-art automated monitoring and controls.  Source: Bruce Cunningham-Dunlop
26.08 Grinding Fine ore bins (or stockpiles) that provide feed to the grinding circuit should have a capacity equal to 30 hours of processing.  Source: Northern Miner Press
26.09 Grinding Grinding is a low-efficiency, power-intensive process and typically can account for up to 40% of the direct operating cost of the mineral processing plant.  Source: Callow and Kenyen 
26.10 Grinding For purposes of design, it may be assumed that a ball mill will carry a 40% charge of steel balls; however, the drive should be designed for a charge of 45%.  Source: Denver Equipment Company 
26.11 Grinding A grate (diaphragm) discharge ball mill will consume 15% more power than an overflow (open) discharge ball mill even though the grinding efficiencies are the same.  Source: Lewis, Coburn, and Bhappu
26.12 Grinding Other things being equal, the larger diameter the drum, the more efficient the grinding.  However, this phenomenon stops when the diameter reaches 12.5 feet (3.8m).  Thereafter, the efficiency bears no relation to diameter.  Source: Callow and Kenyen
26.13 Grinding The ball mill diameter should not exceed 100 times the diameter of the grinding media.  Source: Bond and Myers 
26.14 Grinding In pebble mills, the individual pieces of media should be the same weight, not the same volume, as the optimum size of steel ball.  Source: Bunting Crocker
26.15 Grinding The power draft (draw) in a pebble mill can easily, quickly, and automatically be controlled to an extent that cannot be done on a ball mill.  Source: Bunting Crocker
26.16 Grinding The ratio of length to diameter of a rod mill should not exceed 1.4:1 and the maximum length of a rod (to avoid bending) is 20 feet.  As a result, the largest rod mill manufactured measures fifteen feet diameter and is 21 feet in length.  Source: Lewis, Coburn, and Bhappu
26.17 Grinding For most applications, 70:1 is the maximum practical reduction factor (ratio) for a ball mill, but 60:1 represents typical design practice.  Source: Jack de la Vergne
26.18 Grinding Rubber liners in ball mills may have a service life of 2-3 times that of steel liners.  Source: W. N. Wallinger 
26.19 Grinding The capacity of a mill with synthetic rubber liners is approximately 90% that of the same unit with steel liners.  Source: Yanko Tirado
26.20 Grinding The capacity of a grinding mill for a given product operating in open circuit is only 80% that of the same unit operating in closed circuit.  Source: Lewis, Coburn and Bhappu
26.21 Grinding A dual drive (i.e. twin motors and pinions driving a single ring gear) may be more economical than a single drive when the grinding mill is designed to draw more than 6,000 HP (4.5 Mw).  Source: Rowland and Kjos
26.22 Grinding Geared drives are currently available up to 9,500HP.  Source: Barrat and Pfiefer
26.23 Grinding A direct drive ring motor (gearless drive) is the only option for an autogenous mill rated over 20,000 HP.  Source: Mac Brodie 
26.24 Classifiers The ratio of diameters between the vortex finder (overflow exit) and the apex (underflow exit) of a hydrocyclone classifier must be kept greater than 2:1, otherwise operation may be unpredictable.  Source: Chuck Lagergren and Gary Lubers
26.25 Gravity Separation For gravity separation to be possible, the ratio of the difference in density of the heavy mineral and the medium and the difference between the light mineral and the medium must be greater than 1.25.  Source: Arthur Taggart 
26.26 Gravity Separation Most all wet gravity separation equipment is sensitive to the presence of slimes (minus 400 mesh).  Slimes in excess of 5% should be avoided.  More than 10% causes serious separation problems.  Source: Chris Mills
26.27 Leaching The actual cyanide consumption at a heap leach operation will be no more than one-third the rate indicated by column leach tests.  Source: Tim Arnold
26.28 Flotation Clean metallic gold particles (free gold) finer than 200 microns (65 mesh) float readily with appropriate reagents.  Gravity separation is desirable for larger particles.  Source: Mining Chemicals Handbook (Cyanamid)
26.29 Flotation When designing the flotation circuit for a proposed mill, the scale-up factor for flotation retention times obtained from bench tests is approximately two.  Source: Mining Chemicals Handbook (Cyanamid)
26.30 Flotation To determine a preliminary water balance for a proposed flotation circuit, the pulp density may be assumed to be 30% solids (by weight).  Source: Rex Bull
26.31 Flotation As a rule, water-soluble collectors may be added anywhere in the circuit, but oily, insoluble promoters should always be added to the grinding mill.  Source: Keith Suttill
26.32 Flotation For roasting to be exothermic to the extent that no fuel is required to sustain reaction, the flotation product must contain at least 17% sulfur.  Therefore, the target is 18%.  Source: Dickson and Reid
26.33 Filtration When designing the filters required for a proposed mill, the scale-up factor from bench tests is approximately 0.8.  Source: Donald Dahlstrom
26.34 Filtration When determining vacuum pumps for filter installations required for a proposed mill, the scale-up factor from bench tests is approximately 1.1.  Source: Donald Dahlstrom
26.35 Concentrate The typical moisture content of concentrates shipped from the mine is often near 5%.  If the moisture content is less than 4%, the potential for dust losses becomes significant.  Source: Ken Kolthammer 
26.36 Concentrate The moisture content of concentrate measured by a custom smelter will invariably be 1% higher than was correctly measured by the mine when it was shipped.  Source: Edouardo Escala
26.37 Concentrate If the moisture content of the concentrate is above 8%, problems with sintering and combustion are usually avoided.  Unfortunately, concentrates stored in a cold climate generally require maximum moisture content of 5% to avoid handling problems when frozen.  Concentrate subject to both spontaneous combustion and a cold climate are usually dried to less than 4% and sometimes as dry as ½%.  Source: Ken Kolthammer
26.38 Leach The gold leaching recovery process requires dissolved oxygen in the leach solution to be efficient.  This may be accomplished with air sparging when the oxygen uptake rate is 2 mg/liter/minute or less.  Otherwise, oxygen injection is required.  Source: Damian Connelly
 
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