A critical aspect of geometallurgy is quantifying mineralogical and textural relationships that affect mineral processing (eg, liberation and recovery). However, to date, this has been an expensive and time consuming venture and only minimal amounts of this type of data are typically available to be included in the mine planning process. Our research is focused on developing methods that will produce the required mineralogical and textural data rapidly and inexpensively. New methods of characterising liberation potential from image analysis of coarse particulate material and direct small-scale flotation measurement are compared with measurement of liberation at final grind size (ie conventional tests on MLA). The new tests are designed to rank the liberation potential of samples in order to classify an ore deposit into domains oflow, medium and high liberation potential. This parameter can then be used to adjust the cutoff used to differentiate ore from waste. Results to date show that all tests provide the same ranking for the samples. The measurement based on coarse particulate material compares favourably to the results from MLA analyses on the same samples. Further work is being carried out to determine which of the tests will be the most effective in terms of time, effort and cost.
History
Publication title
Proceedings of the 1st Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy International Geometallurgy Conference (GeoMet 2011)
Editors
D Dominy
Pagination
331-333
ISBN
9781921522499
Department/School
School of Natural Sciences
Publisher
Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Place of publication
Victoria
Event title
1st Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy International Geometallurgy Conference (GeoMet 2011)
Event Venue
Brisbane
Date of Event (Start Date)
2011-09-05
Date of Event (End Date)
2011-09-07
Rights statement
Copyright 2011 The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy