Preconcentration of a Medium-Grade Celestine Ore by Dense Medium Cyclone Using a Factorial Design
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Ariza-Rodríguez, Noemi; Rodríguez Navarro, Alejandro; Ortega García, Francisco; Calero De Hoces, Francisca Mónica; Muñoz Batista, Mario JesúsEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Celestine DMS method Hydrocyclone
Date
2024-03-14Referencia bibliográfica
Ariza-Rodríguez, N.; Rodríguez-Navarro, A.B.; Ortega, F.; Calero de Hoces, M.; Muñoz-Batista, M.J. Preconcentration of a Medium- Grade Celestine Ore by Dense Medium Cyclone Using a Factorial Design. Minerals 2024, 14, 306. https://doi.org/10.3390/min14030306
Patrocinador
ROTATE PROJECT 101058651 (European Union)Résumé
A semi-industrial scale hydrocyclone with a 250 mm internal diameter was used to
concentrate medium-grade celestine ore (75%–85% celestine) from the Montevive deposit of Granada
(Spain) using a dense ferrosilicon (FeSi) medium. For this purpose, a Box–Behnken factorial design
(BBD) was carried out, with the response variable being the Sr concentration measured by X-ray
fluorescence (XRF), as well as the concentration of celestine measured by X-ray diffraction (XRD) of
the mineral collected from the under (sunk) stream of the hydrocyclone. The experimental factors
to be optimised were the density of the medium in the mixing tank (water, FeSi, and feed mineral)
varying from 2.7 to 2.9 kg/L, the hydrocyclone inlet pressure from 0.8 to 1.2 bar, and the hydrocyclone
inclination (from 15º to 25º from the horizontal). The range of densities of the dense medium to
be tested was determined from previous sink–float experiments using medium-grade ore, in which
the distribution of mineral phases with different particle size fractions was determined. To evaluate
the separation behaviour, the following parameters were considered: the enrichment ratio (E), the
tailings discarding ratio (R), and the mineral processing recovery (ε). From the factorial design
and the response surface, the optimum parameters maximising celestine concentration in the under
stream (78%), were determined. These optimised parameters were: a density of 2.75 kg/L for the
dense medium, an inlet pressure of 1.05 bar, and a hydrocyclone inclination varying from 18º to 20º.
Under these conditions, a 94% recovery of celestine (68% Sr) can be achieved. These results show that
medium-grade celestine ore, accumulated in mine tailings dumps, can be effectively concentrated
using DMS hydrocyclones and that the operating parameters can be optimised using a factorial
experiment design. This study can contribute to reducing overexploitation of strategic mineral
resources, avoiding blasting and environmentally damaging clearing, by applying a simple and
sustainable technique.