Laboratory-Scale Optimization of Celestine Concentration Using a Hydrocyclone System
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Ariza-Rodríguez, Noemi; Rodríguez Navarro, Alejandro; Calero De Hoces, Francisca Mónica; Muñoz Batista, Mario JesúsEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Celestine Dense medium Hydrocyclone DMS concentration
Fecha
2023-09-18Referencia bibliográfica
Ariza-Rodríguez, N.; Rodríguez-Navarro, A.B.; de Hoces, M.C.; Muñoz-Batista, M.J. Laboratory-Scale Optimization of Celestine Concentration Using a Hydrocyclone System. Appl. Sci. 2023, 13, 10206. [https://doi.org/ 10.3390/app131810206]
Patrocinador
CNT 5589 (University of Granada); MineTheGap (European Union) CELABDEN PROJECTResumen
A pilot hydrocyclone plant was used to concentrate medium-grade celestine ore (67% celestine)
from the Montevive deposit in Granada (Spain) by using a dense media concentration (DMS)
process. To optimize the concentration process, several types of heavy minerals (coarse, fine C40 ferrosilicon
and/or magnetite) were used to prepare a dense media with a constant density of 3.0 kg/L.
Then, the dense media (loaded with run-of-mine celestine mineral) was fed into the hydrocyclone
system. The mineral was then separated into two streams, the first containing the mineral fractions
that float (over stream) and the second containing fractions that sink (under stream) in the dense
media. Next, the heavy minerals (ferrosilicon and/or magnetite) were recovered from the dense
media using magnetic separation. The celestine mineral recovered from each stream was divided into
two fractions with particles size above or below 250 m to study the effect of the mineral particle size
on the separation process. Their mineral composition was quantified by X-ray diffraction (XRD) using
the Rietveld method. The celestine is preferentially concentrated in the under stream in the mineral
fraction with particles larger than 250 m (up to 90% celestine). The optimum results (highest % of celestine)
were obtained after desliming and using the ferrosilicon C40 medium, which has the smallest
particle size (<40 m) of all media used. The results of this study show that medium-grade celestine
mineral accumulated in the mine tailings can be efficiently concentrated using a DMS process, which
could help in making mine operations more sustainable and eco-friendlier.