Abstract

Water scarcity necessitates the recycling of process water within mineral processing practices. This may however come with its disadvantages for unit operations such as froth flotation as this process is water intensive and sensitive to water chemistry. It is therefore important to monitor the water chemistry of the recycle stream of process water and any other water source to flotation. Monitoring the concentrations of the anions in recycled process water is therefore important to consider as these are speculated to impact flotation performance. Batch flotation tests were conducted using synthetically prepared plant water (3 SPW) with a TDS of 3069 mg/L as the baseline experiment. 3 SPW contained 528 mg/LNO3− and 720 mg/L SO42−, other anions and cations, and no S2O32−. Upon spiking 3 SPW with selected anions, viz, NO3−, SO42− and S2O32−, it was noted that NO3− and SO42− exhibited threshold concentrations while S2O32− did not show a threshold concentration for both copper and nickel grade. Spiking 3 SPW with 352 mg/L more of NO3− to a total 880 mg/L NO3− concentration resulted in the highest copper and nickel grade compared to 3 SPW while increasing the S2O32− from 60 to 78 mg/L increased nickel and copper grade. 720 to 1200 mg/L SO42− and 528 to 880 mg/L NO3− were deemed the concentration boundaries within which lies the threshold concentration above which flotation performance declines with respect to metal grades, while for S2O32− the threshold concentration lies outside the range considered for this study. Anion distribution between the pulp and the froth did not seem to impact the recovery of copper or nickel. Notably, the correlation between the concentrate grades and anion distribution between the froth and the pulp seemed to be ion dependent.

Highlights

  • With the drive to reduce water usage globally, the mining sector must reassess its water usage; in the past, it has contributed greatly to environmental degradation, due to effluent discharge and tailings disposal [1]

  • Spiking 3 SPW with 352 mg/L more of NO3− to a total 880 mg/L NO3− concentration resulted in the highest copper and nickel grade compared to 3 SPW while increasing the S2O32− from 60 to 78 mg/L increased nickel and copper grade. 720 to 1200 mg/L SO42− and 528 to 880 mg/L NO3− were deemed the concentration boundaries within which lies the threshold concentration above which flotation performance declines with respect to metal grades, while for S2O32− the threshold concentration lies outside the range considered for this study

  • The recycled water may contain anions that affect the mineral surface, pulp chemistry balance, and reagent action, the need to establish whether threshold concentrations exist beyond which the flotation performance will be adversely affected by these anions common in mineral processing plant water

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Summary

Introduction

With the drive to reduce water usage globally, the mining sector must reassess its water usage; in the past, it has contributed greatly to environmental degradation, due to effluent discharge and tailings disposal [1]. The presence of ions has been shown to either increase or decrease the floatability of sulfide minerals, depending on both the mineral type and the water chemistry [4,5]. There is limited literature concerning the effect of anions such as NO3−, SO42− and S2O32− on the floatability and recovery of sulfide minerals, and this research considers these anions. These concerns have led to the proposed spiking protocol to ascertain the impact that individually selected anions have on flotation performance [8]

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