Basics in Mineral Processing-Introduction
Basics in Mineral Processing-Introduction
Introduction
products derived from minerals have formed our development cultures from the
flints of the Stone Age man to the uranium ores of Atomic Age”.
The ambition with this handbook, “Basics in Mineral Processing Equipment”, is not
to give a full coverage of the subject above.
The intention is to give technicians involved in mineral operations practical and
useful information about the process equipment used, their systems and operational
environment.
The technical data given are basic, but will increase the understanding of the
individual machines, their functions and performances.
Basic Definitions
It is important to know the definitions of mineral, rock and ore as they represent
different product values and partly different process systems
Mineral Rock Ore
Na+
Ca2+ Si4+ O2-
Mineral
Mineral
Mineral
Rock
Rock
CO22- Fe2+ OH-
Fe2 O3
Rock
Rock
SiO2
Ore
Ore
Ore
Artificial minerals
“Man made” minerals are not minerals by definitions. But from processing point of
view they are similar to virgin minerals and are treated accordingly (mainly in
recycling processes).
Introduction
The goal in mineral processing is to produce maximum value from a given raw
material. This goal can be a crushed product with certain size and shape or
maximum recovery of metals out of a complex ore.
The technologies to achieve these goals are classical, complementary and well
defined.
Below they are presented in the Process Frame of Minerals, classified according
to their interrelations in product size and process environment (dry or wet).
All deposits of minerals, rock or ores have different hardness depending on the
chemical composition and the geological environment.
Mohs numbers are a simple classification:
In 1813 an Austrian geologist, Mr. Mohs, classified minerals according to their individual hardness.
METALLIC
9
ROCK CONSTRUCTION MATERIALS MINERALS
8
BALLAST
7
6
AGGREGATES SAND
4
MICRO FILLER
SAND
3
INDUSTRIAL 1
MINERALS COARSE FILLER FINE FILLER
Introduction
Beside size and hardness, the classical stress forces of rock mechanics are the
fundamentals in most of what we do in mineral processing. They guide us in
equipment design, in systems layout, in wear protection etc. They are always
around and they always have to be considered.
Tensile Compression
Impaction Shearing
Attrition