Abstract

In recent years, improvement of blast-furnace process efficiency is largely associated with an increase in the iron content in iron ore concentrates – the feedstock for agglomeration. The study of the material composition of ores, their features makes it possible to adjust the scheme of preparation of raw materials and determine the optimal content of iron in the concentrate for further processing. When studying the material composition, it was found that the sample of iron ore is represented by ferruginous quartzites of the silicate-magnetite type in combination with magnetite. In the original ore sample, magnetite dominates among ore minerals, and quartz and amphiboles dominate among rock-forming minerals. The coarseness and shape of the isolation of magnetite in all varieties of rocks are generally favorable for enrichment; the mineral is characterized by clear rectilinear and slightly sinuous contours, which contributes to its selective isolation. It should be noted that the magnetite content remains constant as the coarseness of the sample material decreases. Automated mineralogical analysis established that 87.36% of iron is associated with magnetite (with fluctuations in size classes from 86.23 to 91.37%); the rest of the iron is associated with rock-forming minerals. The theoretical content of magnetite in iron ore concentrate, achievable by enriching the original ore of the studied sample, according to automated mineralogical analysis, will be 95.83%, which, in turn, will provide the maximum possible iron content in magnetite concentrate of 68.57%. The existing technology of mining and enrich-ment using 4 types of ores from the Stoilenskoye deposit, with a planned increase in iron to 70%, will result to fluctua-tions of this component in the concentrate from 68.0 to 70.0%.

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