Abstract
Bench scale flotations were carried out to investigate an alternative collector reagent with a more sustainable bias, with selective action at the mineral interface to replace the standard hydrocarbon-base collector used for graphite’s flotation, the kerosene. A soy bio oil was produced by a transesterification reaction to perform as a collector. The study used graphite ore with 5.85% carbon content obtained from Salto da Divisa/MG region, in Bahia-Minas Province, Brazil. The design of experiments showed that the bio ester performed 11% higher than kerosene as a graphite’s collector, improving the flotation’s selectivity with 62% ore grade by bio oil and 88% recovery, against 54% ore grade using kerosene and 77% recovery. The chemical composition investigated with XPS analysis for both concentrates with kerosene and bio ester demonstrated the influence of esters and oxigenated-groups on oxidized graphite surfaces.
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