Abstract

Magnetite is an essential iron-bearing mineral. The primary method of magnetite ore beneficiation involves successive steps of crushing, grinding, and magnetic separation. Reverse cationic flotation is used at the final stage to remove silicate and aluminosilicate impurities from the magnetite concentrate and reduce silica content to 1–3%, depending on metallurgical processing route (electrometallurgy, direct iron reduction). In view of the stringent demands of the magnetite concentrate grade, before flotation, the ore is currently routinely ground down to a particle size below 35 µm, and magnetite particles are ground to a size below 10 µm. This significantly reduces the efficiency of flotation and increases iron loss in the tailings due to the hydraulic report in froth being up to 15–25%. Combined microflotation (CMF) looks to be a promising method of increasing fine-particle flotation efficiency, as it uses relatively small amounts of microbubbles alongside conventional coarse bubbles. Microbubbles act as flotation carriers, collecting gangue particles on their surface, which then coarse bubbles float. The purpose of this study is to explore the effectiveness of CMF for processing a model mixture that contained magnetite particles smaller than 10 µm and glass beads (Ballotini) below 37 µm in size when the initial iron content in the mixture was 63.76%. Commercial reagent Lilaflot 821M was used as both collector and frother. The flotation procedure, which included the introduction of 15 g/t of the collector before the start of flotation, and the addition of 5 g/t of the collector in combination with a microbubble dose of 0.018 m3/t 6 min after starting flotation, ensured an increase in the concentrate grade to 67.63% Fe and iron recovery of 91.16%.

Highlights

  • Demand for iron is sustainably high, and the rates of its production and consumption may serve as indicators of the development of the global economy [1]

  • Magnetite concentrate is produced by separating it from gangue in the successive stages of crushing, grinding, and magnetic separation and flotation [2,3]

  • These findings demonstrate that, with the increase in collector dose above 20 g/t, the concentrate grade essentially grew, but iron recovery dramatically dropped

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Demand for iron is sustainably high, and the rates of its production and consumption may serve as indicators of the development of the global economy [1]. Annual iron production rose beyond 3 billion ton, the need to boost it further still grows. Since rich deposits of iron ore are being depleted, there are more incentives to start developing low- and medium-grade deposits. Magnetite is one of the main iron-bearing minerals. Magnetite concentrate is produced by separating it from gangue in the successive stages of crushing, grinding, and magnetic separation and flotation [2,3]. The major undesirable impurity is quartz, and according to iron- and steel-industry standards, its content cannot exceed 5–7%. Conventional ways to remove quartz involve the reverse, direct anionic or cationic flotation, or their combinations to produce high-grade iron concentrate

Objectives
Methods
Conclusion
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