Abstract

The study evaluated the milling kinetics of three copper ores, from a multi-mineralised deposit, which were identified as sulphide 1 (with bornite as a dominant copper mineral), sulphide 2 (mainly composed of chalcopyrite) and oxide (with malachite as a dominant copper mineral) and related the breakage parameters to the mineral composition data. Five mono-size fractions between 1000 µm and 212 µm were dry milled for short grinding times in the laboratory ball mill in order to obtain data for predicting breakage rate parameters. The analytical and mineralogical characterisation of the ores were performed using X-ray fluorescence (XRF) analysis, scanning electron microscopy energy dispersive spectroscopy (SEM-EDS) analysis, optical microscopy analysis and X-ray diffractometer (XRD). The mineralogy data showed that quartz was the abundant gangue mineral (average for each ore was above 60% (w/w)), followed by K-feldspar minerals (orthoclase and microcline) which constituted between 4% (w/w) and 6% (w/w) and the remainder are the minor calcite and dolomite minerals which are also in the host rock. The experimental milling kinetics parameters and mineralogical data were used to assess the robustness of the heterogeneous (two-component) and homogeneous (single-component) first-order rate breakage models. The mineral composition data were used for setting up the predictions of breakage parameters in the two-component and single-component first-order breakage models. The experimental data fitted better on the two-component breakage model than the single-component breakage model. These results highlighted the influence of two groups of minerals (generally classed as valuable and gangue minerals). The breakage data showed that the selection function for the hard component (the gangue minerals) has a dominant contribution to the overall selection function of the ores, with SiA correlating fairly well with experimental Si. The parameter a in the Austin empirical breakage model was relatively similar (approximately 1) for all three ores, which confirms similar milling conditions to which the ores were subjected to. The data suggests that there is a relationship between breakage parameter α (material-specific parameter) in the Austin empirical breakage model and brittleness index βi (calculated from the mineralogical composition of the gangue phase). No clear trends could be deduced from the cumulative breakage distributions of the three ores. This highlights the complexity of developing relationships between the mineralogical composition data and breakage distributions of the ores which are extracted from the same deposit and with comparable gangue composition.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call