Ore Crushing and grinding circuits
In a mineral processing plant individual
pieces of comminution equipment are almost never used alone, but rather
appropriate“stages” of size reduction are used in a plant to transform the
material from the run-of-mine size to the final product size and then go to
beneficiation stage such as flotation machine, gravity machine, magnetic equipment etc . The appropriate
selection of equipment on a stage-by-stage basis is determined by feed size,
ore type, tonnage, and final product size. Table 1 lists the size ranges within
which various comminution methods operate most efficiently. The fact that the
inherent efficiency of some devices is higher than others causes circuit
designers to select equipment that produces a favorable overall efficiency.
Table 1. Normal
size range and approximate energy efficiencies for various devices
In addition to
taking into account inherent device efficiency in circuit design, the use of
interstage size separation equipment will be shown in this section. A key
aspect of achieving high overall efficiency is to remove product size material
as soon as possible after it is created. Material that is already “finished”
takes up energy and interferes with the breakage of coarse particles. In
addition, the finished material becomes overground. Thus efficient size
separation using screens, hydrocyclones, and other classifiers is a critical
part of circuit design. Some typical crushing and grinding circuits are shown
in Figures 1 to 5.
Figure 1 shows a
circuit that takes run-of-mine size material (up to 1,000-mm pieces) through three
stages of crushing to result in a product of 10 mm. Grizzlies with large
spacings are sometimes used to protect the primary (gyratory) crusher from
extremely large rock pieces and other foreign matter that might disrupt its
operation. Primary crushers are almost always operated in open circuit (without
a size separation step to return oversize material). The primary crusher
product usually goes into coarse ore storage to buffer the other size reduction
steps against big variations in mine production. The two secondary (cone)
crushers are operated in closed circuit with screens to improve their
efficiency and to control the top size into the three tertiary (also cone)
crushers.
FIGURE 1.
Primary, secondary, and tertiary crushing circuit
Figure 2 shows a
typical grinding circuit, which may
follow the circuit in Figure2. Here, the tertiary crusher product (10–15 mm) is
fed to a rod mill (operated in open
circuit) to yield a discharge of 3–6 mm followed by a ball mill operated in
(reverse or pre-) closed circuit with a cyclone cluster. The cyclone overflow
contains a product in the range of 0.2 to 0.05 mm.
FIGURE 2 Rod mill
and ball mill circuit
Figure 3 shows a
primary ball mill circuit. In this
case, a tertiary crusher product is fed to the ball mill. The ball mill
discharge flows into a sump that is in turn pumped to the cyclone cluster for
normal or postclassification. The coarse stream is returned to the sump and the
fine stream forms the product.
FIGURE 3
Single-stage ball mill circuit
Figure 4 shows an
alternative to the more conventional circuits presented above. In this case,
primary crusher product comes to an autogenous/semiautogenous mill via a
coarse-ore stockpile. The crusher product is ground in a single stage and the
product postclassified with a hydrocyclone.
Advantages of this circuit are that it eliminates two stages of crushing and
one stage of grinding.
FIGURE 4
Single-stage autogenous/semiautogenous circuit
Figure 5 shows a
modification of a standard autogenous/semiautogenous grind for ores that
produce “hard-to-grind” pebbles. These pebbles are fed to a cone crusher rather
than just returning them to the mill where they may build up, overloading the
mill.
FIGURE 5
Autogenous/semiautogenous circuit with pebble crushing
Many other
circuits options exist, especially those involving stirred mills for finer
grinding and pregrinding treatments with high-pressure grinding rolls.
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