METHOD FOR THE BENEFICIATION OF IRON ORE STREAMS

20220258177 · 2022-08-18

Assignee

Inventors

Cpc classification

International classification

Abstract

A method of beneficiating iron ore streams, the method comprising the steps of sizing an iron ore stream to provide a fines fraction of less than 3.0 mm diameter particle size and contacting the fines fraction with a magnetic field and magnetically separating the fines fraction into a concentrate stream and a tailings stream.

Claims

1. A method of beneficiating iron ore streams, the method comprising the steps of: sizing an iron ore stream to provide a fines fraction of less than 3.0 mm diameter particle size; contacting the fines fraction with a magnetic field and magnetically separating the fines fraction into a concentrate stream and a tailings stream.

2. A method of beneficiating iron ore streams according to claim 1, wherein the iron ore stream is a comminuted iron ore stream.

3. A method of beneficiating iron ore streams according to claim 1, wherein the method comprises the additional step of: contacting the tailings stream with a second magnetic field and magnetically separating the tailings stream into a second concentrate stream and a second tailings stream.

4. A method of beneficiating iron ore streams according to claim 3, wherein the step of: contacting the tailings stream with a second magnetic field and magnetically separating the tailings stream into a second concentrate stream and a second tailings stream is repeated by contacting the second tailings stream with a third magnetic field to provide a third concentrate stream and a third tailings stream.

5. A method of beneficiating iron ore streams according to claim 4, wherein the step of: contacting the tailings stream with a second magnetic field and magnetically separating the tailings stream into a second concentrate stream and a second tailings stream may be repeated n times to provide an nth concentrate stream and an nth tailings stream.

6. A method of beneficiating iron ore streams according to claim 1, wherein the step of contacting the fines fraction with a magnetic field and separating the fines fraction into a concentrate stream and a tailings stream, contacting the fines fraction with at least one of a high intensity magnetic field, a medium intensity magnetic field and a low intensity magnetic field.

7. A method of beneficiating iron ore streams according to claim 1, wherein the method comprises the use of more than one magnetic field and the strength of the magnetic fields are of increasing intensity.

8. A method of beneficiating iron ore streams according to claim 7, wherein the method comprises the additional step of: contacting the tailings stream with a second magnetic field and magnetically separating the tailings stream into a second concentrate stream and a second tailings stream, and the second magnetic field has higher magnetic intensity than the first magnetic field.

9. A method of beneficiating iron ore streams according to claim 1, wherein the step of contacting the fines fraction with a high intensity magnetic field comprises contacting the fines fraction with a magnetic field of 500 to 18000 Gauss.

10. A method of beneficiating iron ore streams according to claim 1, wherein the step of contacting the fines fraction with a high intensity magnetic field comprises contacting the fines fraction with a magnetic field of 2000 to 10000 Gauss.

11. A method of beneficiating iron ore streams according to claim 1, wherein the step of contacting the fines fraction with a high intensity magnetic field comprises contacting the fines fraction with a magnetic field of 1600 to 6000 Gauss.

12. A method of beneficiating iron ore streams according to claim 1, wherein the step of contacting the fines fraction with a high intensity magnetic field comprises contacting the fines fraction with a magnetic field of 3000 to 6000 Gauss.

13. A method of beneficiating iron ore streams according claim 1, wherein the fines fraction is split into a plurality of fractions and each one of the plurality of fines fractions is fed independently to a different magnetic separator or plurality of magnetic separators operating in parallel.

Description

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

[0056] Further features of the present invention are more fully described in the following description of a non-limiting embodiment thereof. This description is included solely for the purposes of exemplifying the present invention. It should not be understood as a restriction on the broad summary, disclosure or description of the invention as set out above. The description will be made with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:

[0057] FIG. 1 is a flow sheet of the beneficiation process in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention;

[0058] FIG. 2 presents the results from a pilot plant operating in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention demonstrating Fe upgrade and mass yield vs magnetic field strength;

[0059] FIG. 3 presents the relationship between feed grade and product grade;

[0060] FIG. 4 presents the results from a pilot plant with a range of feed types;

[0061] FIG. 5 presents a comparison of beneficiation in accordance with the present invention and a conventional circuit;

[0062] FIG. 6 presents a comparison of beneficiation in accordance with the present invention and a conventional circuit;

[0063] FIG. 7 presents a comparison of beneficiation in accordance with the present invention and laboratory results;

[0064] FIG. 8 presents a comparison of beneficiation in accordance with the present invention and laboratory results;

[0065] FIG. 9 presents a plot of the mass yield and grade when a Magnetic Drum Separator is used in series with a WHIMS unit; and

[0066] FIG. 10 presents a plot of the mass yield and grade when a Magnetic Drum Separator is used in series with a WHIMS unit.

DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS

[0067] Throughout the specification, unless the context requires otherwise, the word “solution” or variations such as “solutions”, will be understood to encompass slurries, suspensions and other mixtures containing undissolved solids.

[0068] Throughout this specification, unless the context requires otherwise, the word “comprise” or variations such as “comprises” or “comprising”, will be understood to imply the inclusion of a stated integer or group of integers but not the exclusion of any other integer or group of integers.

[0069] Those skilled in the art will appreciate that the invention described herein is amenable to variations and modifications other than those specifically described. It is to be understood that the invention includes all such variations and modifications. The invention also includes all of the steps, features, compositions and compounds referred to or indicated in the specification, individually or collectively and any and all combinations or any two or more steps or features.

[0070] In conventional iron ore operations, fine iron ore streams are typically wet processed using size separation processes, the oversize material going to final product. The undersize material of about −1.0 mm is passed to a wet processing circuit to remove coarser material.

[0071] In FIG. 1 there is provided a flow sheet of a beneficiation process in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention.

[0072] Scrubber feed 10 is passed to a wet scrubber stage 14. The undersize material 28 (typically less than 65 mm) from the scrubber 14 is wet screened 30 at 1.0 to 3.0 mm. The wet screening underflow 34 reports to the magnetic circuit.

[0073] The magnetic circuit comprises a magnetic drum separator 36 and a vertical wet high intensity magnetic separator (WHIMS) 38. The tailings stream 40 from the magnetic drum separator 36 reports to the WHIMS 38. The concentrate stream 42 from the magnetic drum separator 36 reports to a product stream 26.

[0074] In the WHIMS circuit, a series of magnets produce an undulating magnetic field and appropriately spaced water sprays wash the particles in the appropriate collection hopper as the slurry moves through the magnetic field. There may be provided more than one hopper to collect materials of varying magnetic strengths. Some may be retained, some recycled back through the WHIMS and some discarded.

[0075] The tailings stream 46 from the WHIMS 38 is thickened 48 and passed to a tailings storage facility 50. The second concentrate stream 52 from the WHIMS 38 reports to a product stream 26.

[0076] Results obtained from both pilot plant and laboratory scale trials demonstrate a number of advantages that the present invention has over existing processes. By applying a low magnetic field strength (low/medium intensity magnets) as a first step to remove ore with a high magnetic susceptibility, the feed to the variable high intensity magnets is stripped of particles that can cause processing issues. The use of a single or multiple magnetic separators incorporating variable magnetic field strength in accordance with an aspect of the invention allows for continuous process adjustments to ensure the correct field strength, based on the magnetic susceptibility of the feed.

[0077] Field trials have demonstrated that the invention can increase the Fe content from a low grade iron ore feed (typically 44 to 55 .sup.wt/.sub.wt% Fe content) to more than 58 .sup.wt/.sub.wt% Fe resulting in a saleable product by using a magnetic field strength of 1600 to 3400 Gauss with a varied mass yield that could be in excess of 45% reporting to magnetic concentrate (see FIG. 2). With a medium grade feed (typically 55 to 58 .sup.wt/.sub.wt% Fe), a higher magnetic field strength of 4000 to 6000 Gauss can be applied resulting in a substantial increase in mass yield of up to 60% while still maintaining an acceptable product grade of more than 58 .sup.wt/.sub.wt% Fe. With high grade iron ore feed (58 to 66 .sup.wt/.sub.wt% Fe), mass yield in excess of 60% can be achieved at magnetic field strength of 6000 to 10000 Gauss.

[0078] Employment of a lower magnetic field strength results in a higher product grade at the expense of mass recovery while a higher field strength increases the mass yield at the expense of the product grade. As shown in FIG. 3, a relatively low magnetic field (2500 Gauss) at a feed grade of 52% Fe yielded a product with 59% Fe with a mass yield of 21% w/w while applying a higher field strength (5100 Gauss) resulted in a product grade of 56.2% Fe with a mass yield of 61% w/w

[0079] It will be appreciated that magnetic susceptibility of the ore (e.g. different ratios of the various types of iron ore might have the same Fe grade but different magnetic susceptibility) will affect the most suitable magnetic field strength.

[0080] As shown in FIG. 4, the proposed beneficiation circuit can handle a wide range of feed types (in terms of Fe content or grade). The feed was obtained from a typical iron ore comminution circuit. The capability to alter the magnetic field strength can be used to select the optimum operating conditions for a feed type.

[0081] The data in FIGS. 5 and 6 compare the metallurgical performance of a wet magnetic beneficiation circuit in accordance with the present invention and a conventional wet beneficiation circuit using gravity and centrifugal forces (e.g. cyclones and spirals). Samples were obtained from both the pilot magnetic plant and the conventional circuit and compared in terms of mass yield (w/w %) and the Fe upgrade as a ratio of the Feed grade and product grade.

[0082] FIG. 5 demonstrates that a low Gauss setting the magnetic circuit mass yield is similar to the conventional circuit, but with improved upgrade with resulting improvement in quality.

[0083] FIG. 6 demonstrates that at high Gauss settings the upgrade ration of the magnetic circuit is less than the conventional circuit, but with vastly improved mass yield while the final product grade is still within an acceptable range.

[0084] FIGS. 7 and 8 compares results from pilot plant results with test work conducted on laboratory scale.

[0085] FIG. 7 demonstrates that the results obtained on laboratory scale magnetic circuit test work at an internal facility compares very well with the pilot test work conducted at an operating plant. FIG. 8 show the comparison with the same pilot plant data with laboratory scale test work conducted at two external facilities.

[0086] FIGS. 9 and 10 demonstrate the mass yield and grades (% Fe) when a Magnetic Drum Separator (MDS) is used in series with a WHIMS unit.

[0087] FIG. 9 shows the relative low mass yield on a low magnetic intensity MDS unit but with high Fe grade and the non-magnetic fraction then treated by a WHIMS unit to produce an upgraded final product. FIG. 10 show similar results when a medium magnetic intensity MDS unit is used resulting in a higher mass yield due to the higher magnetic field (1.92% vs 0.53%), but still relatively small when compared with the VWHIMS mass yield

[0088] The use of magnetic force as in the proposed invention also results in higher process efficiency compared to the alternative processes which rely on centrifugal and gravitational forces to separate the iron ore and gangue. By varying the magnetic field, feed rate and slurry properties the treatment of various grades and qualities of ore can be treated efficiently in the proposed process invention.

[0089] The proposed invention includes processes that are easier to control and adjust for varying feed stream qualities therefore ensuring better process efficiencies and quality.