Magnetite Concentration Methods

Magnetite Concentration Methods

Table of Contents

Magnetite is the most strongly magnetic of all minerals, and it is therefore natural that the earliest application of magnetism to ore dressing was for its concentration from gangue. Magnetite ores occur in large bodies in almost all countries, and on account of the high iron tenor of the pure mineral, and the ease with which it is concentrated, its treatment forms one of the most important fields of magnetic separation.

Magnetite (composition Fe3O4) has a specific gravity ranging from 5.0 to 5.1, and is sufficiently heavy to permit of its concentration from gangue by specific-gravity methods, which have had an extensive application. The object of the separation, however, is twofold: the concentration of the mineral in the raw ore to a product of sufficient richness for the blast furnace, and the elimination of phosphorous and sulphur, elements which frequently occur with magnetite in nature and which enter into combination with the iron in the furnaces with the production of an inferior metal. The specific gravities of the minerals carrying these objectionable impurities do not permit their complete separation from the magnetite by water concentration. The high magnetic permeability of magnetite, which is 65 per cent. of that of tempered steel, is much greater than the permeabilities of these minerals and permits a separation to be made in magnetic fields of low intensity.

The results from the several separators must not be judged on the basis of the percentage of iron in the tailing product, as this figure is controlled largely by factors other than the efficiency of the separator. Iron ores, to be commercially profitable, must carry a high percentage of iron, the low limit being, apparently, between 20 and 25 per cent. iron present as magnetite. This results in a low ratio of concentration and a comparatively small quantity of tailing, and a large percentage of iron in the tailing may represent but a small loss when compared with the total iron in the ore. The coarseness of the crystallization of the individual minerals, the presence of iron in nonmagnetic form, such as hematite, pyrite, ferruginous silicates, etc., must also be taken into account, while the grade of the concentrate aimed at is also an important factor in determining the efficiency of the separation in terms of the percentage of the iron in the original ore recovered as concentrate.

The American practise tends toward the production of the coarsest size concentrate consistent with a clean separation and reasonable recovery, employing separators which treat the ore dry. In Sweden it is customary to grind the ore to 1 mm., or even finer, and separate on machines which treat the ore wet, resorting to briquetting to transform the concentrate into a product suitable for the blast furnace. These differences in practise are largely due to the coarser crystallization of the American ores, the Swedish ores being more often made up of minerals in a fine state of division. Magnetic cobbing has been successfully applied in both countries, and produces excellent results with ores which carry magnetite in large pieces, and in which apatite and pyrite do not interfere. In Sweden, lump ore from 4 to 5 ins. in size has been cobbed on the Wenstrom separator with the production of a good concentrate, and the separation of lumps 1.5 to 2 ins. in size is regularly carried on in America on the Ball-Norton single-drum separator, and in Sweden on the Wenstrom and Grondal cobbing machines.

In the dry concentration of magnetite ores the fine dust formed by crushing is often a source of loss, but is not so counted when some of the newer wet separators are used; in Sweden it is not unusual for over 40 per cent. of the ore fed to the separators to be fine enough to pass a 1/8-mm. opening.

The following table is representative of the best practise in the magnetic concentration of magnetite ores in the United States and Sweden.

Elimination of Impurities

The objectionable elements occurring with magnetite which are wholely or partially eliminated by magnetic concentration, are, in the order of their importance, phosphorus as apatite, sulphur as pyrite, etc., and titanium as menaccanite or ilmenite.

Apatite (calcium phosphate, sp. gr. 3.18 to 3.25) is usually

electromagnetic separator results

feebly magnetic, though not sufficiently so to be picked up by magnetic fields of low intensity; a red variety, found at Mineville, N. Y., is sufficiently magnetic to be sometimes drawn into the heads by the Ball-Norton separator. This mineral is a common accessory in magnetite ores; it is quite brittle, and, on being crushed, forms a fine powder which has a tendency to stick to the magnetite grains and so find its way into the concentrate. This tendency is less marked when the concentration is carried out in water, and may be quite thoroughly overcome by the use of a spray of wash water while the magnetite is held by the magnets. In dry concentration the use of a blast of air directed against the minerals held by the magnets is beneficial, or the employment of a separator which turns the concentrate over and over as it is passed from pole to pole of opposite sign.

Apatite, when present in quantity in the ore, may form a valuable by-product, as it may be worked up into soluble form and sold as fertilizer. At Mineville, N. Y., the Old Bed ores carry from 1.35 to 2.25 per cent. phosphorus, and the tailing products find a market for their phosphorus content. Two grades of tailing are made: the first called first grade apatite, carries 3.55 per cent. iron and 12.71 per cent. phosphorus, equivalent to 63.55 per cent. bone phosphorus. The second grade apatite carries 8.06 per cent. phosphorus and 12.14 per cent. iron, or an equivalent of 40.30 per cent. bone phosphate. At Svarto, near Lulca, Sweden, the ore carries up to 3 per cent. phosphorus as apatite, averaging 1 per cent., and the tailing product from the separators carries 13.7 per cent. phosphorus. This tailing product is concentrated by jigging, and after fine grinding, is treated chemically for the removal of remaining magnetite, calcined with soda ash and sold as fertilizer containing 30 per cent. phosphoric acid in soluble form.

Concentrates, to be acceptable at furnaces which turn out the best grades of iron, should not carry more than .01 per cent. phosphorus; ores which are below this limit command a premium. As the apatite is present principally in the waste particles, the higher the grade of concentrate produced the lower will the percentage of phosphorus be, and tests should be made on the ore under consideration to determine the economical limit of concentration and elimination of impurities, where the advantage from these ceases to offset the increased loss of iron in the tailing due to the increasing ratio of concentration.

Pyrite (FeS2, sp. gr. 4.8 to 5.2) is a common accessory mineral in magnetite ores. It is nonmagnetic and is not influenced by the most intense magnetic fields; it is easily eliminated in the tailing product when not in an excessively fine state of division.

Pyrrhotite (Fe7S8, sp. gr. 4.5 to 4.65) is, on the other hand, usually ferromagnetic, and is drawn into the magnetite concentrate. It is not so strongly magnetic as magnetite, and sometimes a partial elimination is accomplished; but, generally speaking, it may not be removed from magnetite by magnetic separation. In the case of some complex ores carrying pyrrhotite, blende in a fine state of division, etc., the sulphur is eliminated by roasting. Magnetite does not lose its magnetism except when exposed to a red heat for a protracted period, and such roasting may be carried out either before or after separation. Roasting for the removal of sulphur is practised on some concentrates produced in Sweden; the heat employed in briquetting fine concentrate accomplishes at the same time an elimination of the sulphur.

Another objectionable element occurring with magnetite is titanium in the form of menaccanite (sp. gr. 4.5 to 5.0, composition the same as hematite but with varying proportions of iron replaced by titanium). This mineral is magnetic, but not to so great a degree as magnetite; a separation of magnetite and menaccanite may be accomplished, but only at the expense of a serious loss of iron in the tailing product. Titanium is an objectionable constituent in iron ores on account of its tendency to form accretions in the blast furnace. Results of tests made to eliminate menaccanite from magnetite will be found in the following table of beach sands, in which the minerals occur as free particles, forming the raw material for separation:

electromagnetic-separator-beach-sands

Magnetic Sands

Many attempts have been made to exploit beds of magnetite sands concentrated by waves and streams along ocean beaches and banks of rivers. Such deposits are abundant at Moisie, on the St. Lawrence, and in smaller developments in the United States at Block Island, on Long Island, along the Great Lakes and on the Pacific Coast; abroad, deposits in Brazil and New Zealand have attracted attention. The writer is not informed of any present commercial operation on such deposits; magnetic impurities in the sands (menaccanite, etc.) and the unreliability of the deposits due to their mode of formation have probably been the chief causes of failure.

Briquetting

With ores which require fine comminution for the liberation of the magnetite the concentrate produced is usually briquetted, as fine concentrate is not acceptable at the furnaces. While the mill at Edison, N. J., was in operation the ore was crushed to pass 1/16-in. x ½ in. openings, and the concentrate briquetted. In Sweden the briquetting of concentrate is usual.

In Sweden the plants installed by The Grondal Kjellin Co. have been very successful. The fine concentrate is pressed into briquettes without the use of binding material, the moisture in the concentrate being regulated to obtain briquettes sufficiently firm to be removed from the press and loaded onto the cars used in the furnace. These cars are made of a frame covered with fire-brick and have a tongue cast in the frame at the front end and a groove at the rear end, and along the sides are fitted with a flange which dips into a groove filled with sand in the furnace, a string of these cars thus forming an air-tight platform. The furnace is in the form of a tunnel, with track running down the center, and in the middle has a combustion chamber gas-fired. The air needed for combustion is admitted beneath the gas-tight platform at the feed end of the furnace, and, passing the discharge end, returns above the platforms of the cars with their loads of briquettes, enters the combustion chamber, whence the products of combustion continue above the platform to an outlet near the feed end of the furnace. The cool air circulating beneath the platform keeps the wheels and framework of the cars cool, becomes heated as it at the same time cools the burned briquettes, and enters the combustion chamber hot; the hot gases in turn heat the briquettes and are themselves cooled before they are liberated from the furnace. Owing to this application of the regenerative principle the thermal efficiency of the furnace is good, the gases escaping at a temperature of less than 100° C. and the consumption of coal averaging 7 per cent. of the weight of briquettes burnt, the principal loss in heat is the

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evaporation of the water in the briquettes. The temperature in the combustion chamber reaches 1,300° or 1,400° C, and at this heat the particles agglutinate sufficiently to make a firm, hard briquette which will stand rough usage. The time consumed by the operation varies with the ore treated and the degree of desulphurization required; any sulphur in the concentrate is readily eliminated.

Briquettes may be made at a lower temperature through the use of various binding materials: at Pitkaranta, Finland, 3 to 5 per cent. lime is added to the concentrate which is then briquetted, and, after being allowed to set for two weeks, heated to 800° C.; at Edison, N. J., briquettes were made with a resinous binder. Where no binder is used the only requirements are a proper proportion of coarse and fine particles to avoid excessively large interstitial spaces, and a sufficiently high heat to sinter the magnetite particles. It has been estimated (P. McN. Bennie) that the cost of briquetting under conditions obtaining in the Eastern United States would be 45 cents per ton.

At Mineville, New York; there are extensive magnetic concentration works built by Messrs. Witherbee, Sherman & Co. for the treatment of ores from their mines. The ores are of two classes: the New Bed and the Harmony ores carry from 40 to 69 per cent. iron as magnetite and are low in phosphorus; the Old Bed ores are high in phosphorus, carrying from 1.35 to 2.25 per cent. The apatite varies in color and in the size of crystals; that with a deep red color develops magnetic qualities of sufficient strength to carry some free crystals into the concentrate; it also adheres to the crystals of magnetite in a more marked degree than the green or yellow varieties. The yellow crystals break away freely from the magnetic material. When the magnetite is in large pieces in the crude ore, or in large crystals, it is readily handled by cobbing; when the ore is massive, or when the magnetite and apatite crystals are small and intimately associated, finer crushing is necessary for the same degree of concentration. The ore from the Harmony Mines is cobbed on a Ball-Norton single-drum separator, and magnetite recovered in large pieces, the waste going for finer crushing and further magnetic treatment to Mill No. 1.

The cobbing plant is near the “B” shaft of the Harmony Mines, the skips dumping into a chute which feeds a 30- x 18-in. Blake crusher weighing 29 tons. The crusher is driven from a jack shaft which is belted to a General Electric induction motor of 100 H.P. operating at 440 volts. The ore is crushed to 1½ ins. and is conveyed from the crusher by a 20-in. Robins belt conveyor to a bin over a Ball-Norton single-drum separator. After passing through the separator the cobbed material and tailing fall on separate 20-in. belt conveyors and are transported up an incline to storage bins. These two conveyors are operated by a rope drive. The cobbed product and the tailing storage bins are placed over and alongside, respectively, two tracks upon which standard-gauge hopper-bottom cars run, connecting with mill, railroad and wharves. The cobbed product is called “Harmony cobbed “: it is a coarse magnetite with little gangue, and carries about 61 per cent. iron; it is used to mix with lower-grade ores at the furnaces, where it is desirable on account of its coarseness and uniform grade. The tailing carries sufficient magnetite to be crushed and concentrated in Mill No. 1.

Mill No. 1 treats crude ores from the “A” shaft of the Harmony Mine and the tailing from the cobbing plant. The ore is weighed and dumped into a storage bin which feeds a 30- x 18-in. Blake crusher working at 250 R.P.M. After passing through the

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crusher the ore is screened to ¾-in., the fines going directly to a dryer, while the oversize is passed through a size H Gates crusher, after which it also goes to the dryers.

The dryer is built of 4- x 6- x 12-in. furnace-brick. The material slides over cast-iron tees 5 ins. wide on top and with a shallow stem arranged in horizontal rows, six in a row, with the rows 6 ins. apart, vertically. The bars, in vertically adjacent rows, are staggered. Six rows parallel to and underneath each other are followed by six similar rows at right angles to the first; this arrangement obtains from the top to the bottom of the stack. The dryer is made with a bridge wall and an outside furnace. The gases from the furnace divide at the bridge wall, part passing up the chimney and part into the shaft. There are two openings from the shaft into the chimney, which serve to permit the gases to pass from one to the other, which tends to raise the capacity of the dryer by reason of the eddying effect set up.

From the dryer the material is fed to a Ball-Norton single-drum separator. The concentrate from this machine goes to a shipping bin and the tailing through a set of Anaconda rolls, 40 x 15 ins., with Latrobe steel shells, operating at 50 R.P.M. Thence the ore is elevated and passed over a 3/8-in. tower screen from which it is fed to two Ball-Norton belt-type separators which make concentrate, a shipping product carried to bins on a Robins belt conveyor, and tailing which passes to two other separators of the same type but operating with a stronger current. These cleaning separators remove the iron to the economical limit, and the tailing here produced is conveyed to a waste dump. The iron product of the cleaning separators is crushed in Reliance rolls 36 x 14 ins. fitted with Latrobe steel shells and operating at 100 R.P.M. The final cleaning is effected on two other separators of the same type, the magnetite product is carried to shipping bins by a 20-in. belt conveyor, and the tailing to the dump upon an 11-in. belt conveyor, which handles all the tailing from this mill. The power supply for this mill comprises four Crocker-Wheeler 50 H.P. direct-current motors, operating at 220 volts, and a 75 H.P. General Electric motor also employed.

Mill No. 1 has a capacity of 800 tons of crude Old Bed ore per day, or of 600 tons of Harmony or New Bed ore; both figures are for 10 hours. Of the feed 77 per cent. is recovered as concentrate. A table of average results follows:

electromagnetic-separator-average-result

Mill No. 2 treats the Old Bed ore, which is high in phosphorus. The treatment here is similar in many points to that in Mill No. 1, and the points of difference only will be described. The power is furnished by three 60 H.P. General Electric motors, form K, operating on 440 volts. A 10 H.P. motor of the same type is used to drive the conveyors to the shipping bins. The mill is divided into the crushing, the separating, and the re-treating plants, each of which divisions is independent as to power supply; each motor is arranged to control the machinery and con-

electromagnetic separator flow sheet

veyors without reference to the others. Between each two divisions bins are installed having storage capacity for a two-hours’ run.

The Wetherill Type F separator is working on the same material as the Ball-Norton belt separators. The Wetherill Type E separators treat the tailing crushed to 10 and 16 mesh, from the main battery of separators and make three products. The first belt removes any magnetite liberated by the secondary crushing, which

electromagnetic separator section of mill

is re-treated on a Ball-Norton belt separator, which makes a shipping concentrate and tailing. The second, third and fourth belts make a hornblende product, which also carries the magnetic apatite mentioned as sometimes being found in these ores. The nonmagnetic discharge from these separators is called first grade apatite, consisting of apatite with pure white silica. The magnetite product from Mill No. 2 averages 65 per cent. iron and higher. The plant is arranged to re-treat this concentrate and produce a magnetite carrying in excess of 71 per cent. iron, which is sometimes made to supply the demand for the manufacture of the so-called “magnetite” electric lamps. The mill has a capacity of 800 tons of Old Bed ore in 10 hours. A table showing the average analyses of the crude ore and products of this mill for a year’s run, together with the approximate amounts of the several products, follows:

electromagnetic-separator-product

The other elements in the Old Bed concentrate are, silica, 2.2 per cent.; manganese, 0.08 per cent.; alumina, 0.90 per cent.; lime, 3.14 per cent.; magnesia, 0.31 per cent.; sulphur, trace. The first-grade apatite is the material passing off unaffected by the magnets of the Type E Wetherill separators; the second-grade apatite is the discharge from the last three belts of the same separators.

At Lyon Mountain or Chateaugay Mines, New York, the ores carry from 25 to 40 per cent. iron, though richer bodies are occasionally found which run from 50 to 55 per cent. iron; the average iron content of the ores treated may be given as 35 per cent. The ore consists of magnetite with orthoclase, quartz, and pyroxene; accessory minerals are titanite, zircone and apatite, all present in small amounts. The magnetite is distributed through the mass, and also occurs in aggregates and stringers. The mill flow sheet follows:

The concentrate bins are of 600-ton capacity; there are two tailing bins; one for fine and one for coarse material, each of

electromagnetic separator flow sheet for mill

electromagnetic separator flow sheet for lyon mountain mill

200 tons capacity. The dryer is vertical and 40 ft. in height; the ore drops between cross-laid T-bars coming into thorough contact with the heated gases. The furnace is situated 10 ft. above

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the bottom of the dryer, and the cold air feeding the furnace passes through the discharge outlet of the dryer, serving to cool the ore and heat the air before entering the fire-box. The tail-

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ings are screened in a 1/8-in. trommel, and after grinding, used for locomotive sand ; the coarse tailings have found a market as rail road ballast and material for concrete work. Power is furnished by two 225 H. P. 3-phase induction motors; the actual running of the mill requires 250 KW. The capacity of the mill is in excess of 50 tons per hour. Sixteen men on each shift operate the mill; of these four attend to the crushers and rolls, three are required on the separators, one man fires the dryer, another is employed as oiler, one works in the motor room, and there is one foreman; the remainder of the shift dump, weigh, load, and sample the ore. Analyses of the crude ore and products follow:

electromagnetic-separator-products

The average concentrate is said now to carry 63 per cent. iron and 0.01 per cent. phosphorus; the tailing being reduced to 4 per cent. iron. The Chateaugay ore commands a premium for the manufacture of low phosphorus iron.

At Port Orem, New Jersey, the New Jersey Iron Mining Co. is operating a magnetic-concentration plant on magnetite ores. The ore carries magnetite in stringers and grains in a gangue of quartz and some finely disseminated apatite. It is crushed in breakers and rolls to a size varying from 20 mesh to ¼ in., depending upon the ore treated. A modification of the Ball-Norton separator is employed. The ore carries about 25 per cent. iron and 1 per cent. phosphorus; the concentrate carries 61 per cent. iron and from 0.045 to 0.3 per cent. phosphorus; the tailing carries from 11 to 17 per cent. iron.

At Hibernia, New Jersey, the Joseph Wharton Mining Co. is operating a magnetic-concentrating plant on magnetite ores which carry from 38 to 40 per cent. iron, 0.04 per cent. phosphorus, and no sulphur. The ore is crushed by Buchanan breakers and rolls to ¼ in., and is separated upon a Ball-Norton double-drum separator. One hundred tons of ore yield 40 tons of concentrate, 20 tons of middling, and 40 tons of tailing. The middling is recrushed in tight rolls and repassed. The concentrate carries from 63 to 64 per cent. iron and 0.008 per cent. phosphorus; the middling product carries 40 per cent. iron, and the tailing from 5 to 6 per cent. iron. Dust is withdrawn from the separator by a fan, and after settling in a dust chamber, is sent to the waste dump.

At Lebanon, Pennsylvania, the Pennsylvania Steel Co. is operating a plant equipped with Grondal Type V separators. The capacity of the plant is 300 long tons of 60 per cent. iron concentrate per twelve-hour shift, from a raw ore carrying 40 per cent. iron.

At Solsbury, New York, the Solsbury Iron Co. is completing a magnetic-concentration mill equipped with Ball-Norton single- drum and Ball-Norton belt separators, having a capacity of 500 tons in 20 hours. The ore is passed through gyratory crushers, screened, and the oversize on 1.5-in. screens passed over cobbing separators; the undersize, reduced to 30 mesh, is passed through a drying tower and separated on the belt-type separators. It is expected to ship a product carrying 69 per cent. iron from the 30- mesh material and a 60 per cent. coarse- concentrate from the cobbing separators.

At Mount Hope, New Jersey, the Empire Steel & Iron Co. is completing a magnetic cobbing plant equipped with Ball-Norton separators and having a capacity of 600 tons daily.

At Benson Mines, New York, the Benson Iron Ore Co. is building a magnetic-separation mill with an estimated capacity of 3000 tons daily. Steam shovels are used to mine the ore, which is crushed in Edison giant rolls and separated on Ball-Norton separators.

At Port Henry, New York, the Cheaver Iron Ore Co. is building a magnetic-concentration mill equipped with Ball-Norton separators.

At Herrang, Sweden, the Herrangs Grufaktiebolag is operating a magnetic-concentration and briquetting plant of 50,000 metric tons yearly capacity. The ore carries about 40 per cent. iron with 1.2 per cent. sulphur and 0.003 per cent. phosphorus. The gangue consists partly of pyroxene and garnet. The ore is broken to ½ in. in breakers and ground in Grondal ball mills to 1 mm.

This mill consists of a horizontal cylinder built up of longitudinal steel ribs, with cast-iron end-plates. Through one end of the cylinder the ore is introduced with water over a roller feeder. The crushing is done by chilled cast-iron balls ranging in size from 6 ins. in diameter downward. No screens are required, the degree of fineness to which the ore is ground being regulated by the speed of the water current passing through the cylinder. The wear of the balls is about 2 lbs. for each ton of ore ground. The

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force required for each mill is from 20 to 25 H.P.: the capacity is from 50 to 100 tons per 24 hours, varying with the hardness of the ore and the fineness to which it is reduced.

The pulp from the ball mills is passed through two V-shaped settling boxes from which the sand is drawn off through a pipe at the bottom; the slime remaining in suspension in the water is subjected to magnetic treatment by a pair of Grondal slime magnets. The sand and magnetic slime are treated on Grondal Type III and Type V separators. The concentrate carries from 60 to 65 per cent. iron with 0.17 per cent. sulphur and 0.0025 per cent. phosphorus. The tailing product carries from 5 to 15 per cent. iron, and the waste slime 9.6 per cent. iron.

The powdered concentrate is pressed into briquettes without the use of binding material, the moisture in the concentrate being regulated to give a briquette sufficiently firm to bear handling from the press to the car used in the furnaces. The finished briquettes carry 63 per cent. iron with 0.003 per cent. sulphur and 0.0025 per cent. phosphorus; they are hard but porous, the percentage of porosity being 23.9 per cent. Such a plant as is described above costs in the neighborhood of $50,000 to erect, and requires 20 men, 200 H.P. and 465 gallons of water per minute to

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operate. It is probable that where a higher scale of wages obtains economical operation would demand labor-saving appliances and permit a reduction in the working force.

At Edison, New Jersey, there is a large installation for the treatment of magnetite ores, designed by Mr. Thomas A. Edison and erected by the New Jersey and Pennsylvania Concentrating Co. Between the time of the design of this mill and its completion a severe drop was experienced in the iron-ore market, due to the discovery of the Mesabi ore beds; the mill in consequence has never been operated except in an experimental way. The mill contains so many valuable ideas and is on such a large scale that it merits description. The plant was designed for 4000 tons capacity per 24 hours, but has put through 300 tons per hour, which is at the rate of 6000 tons per 20 hours. The ore consists of magnetite in a gangue of feldspar with a little quartz and apatite. The ore is mined in open quarries and contains lumps up to 5 tons in weight. It is loaded by steam shovels and dumped on skips holding 6.5 tons each, which are hauled to the mill on cars by locomotive. The skips are of the open, flat form used in quarry work and are suspended by two chains and hooks at the front end and by one chain and hook at the rear; they are lifted at the mill by two electric traveling cranes and then, by unhooking the two front hooks, they are dumped to.

  1. One No. 1 roller feeder, 3 ft. diameter and 6 ft. long. To hopper 6 ft. square and thence to.
  2. One pair of No. 1 giant rolls, 72 ins. x 72 ins., set 14 ins. apart. To
  3. One pair No. 2, or intermediate rolls, 48 ins. x 60 ins., set 7 ins. apart. By No. 1 bucket elevator to
  4. One pair No. 3 or first corrugated rolls, 36 ins. x 36 ins., set 3.5 ins. apart. To
  5. One pair No. 4 or second corrugated rolls, 36 ins. x 36 ins., set 1.5 ins. apart. To
  6. One pair No. 5 or third corrugated rolls, 24 ins. x 20 ins., set ½ in. apart. By No. 1 belt conveyor and thence by No. 2 bucket elevator to
  7. Three No. 1 fixed screens in series, the upper one having 1½ x 3-in. slots and the two lower 1¼-in. x 2½-in. slots. Oversize, bolts, roots, etc., to dump; undersize to
  8. One No. 1 dryer in the form of a drying kiln with a distributor at the top. By No. 2 belt conveyor, and thence by No. 3 bucket elevator, followed by Edison distributing conveyor to
  9. No. 1 stock house, holding 16,000 tons. By No. 4 bucket conveyor to
  10. Bin holding 25 tons. By two No. 2 corrugated roller feeders to
  11. From (10) and (12). Two sets of No. 6 or three high rolls, 36 ins. x 30 ins., set close together, but the feed opens them to about 1½ ins. Only one set is run at a time. The crushed ore is carried in succession by two No. 5 belt conveyors, one No. 6 bucket conveyor, one No. 5 bucket elevator, one No. 7 Edison distributing conveyor, and twenty No. 3 roller feeders to
  12. Two hundred and forty No. 2 fixed inclined screens arranged in sixty sets, with four screens in series in each set, having 1/16-in. x ½-in. slots. Oversize to (11); undersize to
  13. Sixty No. 1 Edison magnetic separators. These are 12-in. magnets and are arranged in twenty sets, with three magnets in series in each set. Heads by two No. 8 belt conveyors to tailings by No. 9 belt conveyor to
  14. One No. 2 dryer in the form of a drying kiln with a distributor at the top. To
  15. From (14), (16), and (19). Two sets No. 7 or three-high Tolls, 36 ins. x 30 ins., set close together, but the feed opens them to about ½ in. Only one set is run at a time. The crushed ore is carried in succession by two No. 10 belt conveyors, one No. 11 bucket conveyor, one No. 6 bucket elevator, one No. 12 Edison distributing conveyor, and twenty No. 4 roller feeders to
  16. Two hundred and forty fixed inclined screens, No. 3, arranged in sixty sets, with four screens in series in each set, having 1/16-in. x ½-in. slots. Oversize to (15); undersize to
  17. Ninety-six Edison magnetic separators. They are 8-in. magnets and are arranged in thirty-two sets, with three magnets in series in each set. Heads to (18); tailings to
  18. Eight dusting chambers. Heavy material to (19); light material to
  19. Three hundred and twenty No. 3 Edison magnetic separators. They are 4-in. magnets and are arranged in sixty-four sets with five in series in each set. Heads to (21); tailings from first or upper magnets to (22); tailings from second, third, fourth, and fifth magnets to (15).
  20. From (18). One No. 4 Edison magnetic separator for fine material. Heads to (21); tailings are sold for paint.
  21. From (19) and (20). No. 2 and No. 3 stock houses with a total capacity of 35,000 tons. From these the concentrates pass in succession through the mixers, the briquetting machines and the baking ovens.
  22. From (13), (17), and (19), sand house. Tailings are here sized and sold for mortar sand, etc.; on account of proximity to large cities this material is in demand.

The labor required for mining, milling, and briquetting is 311 men per 24 hours, divided into two shifts of 10 hours each, 46 men and boys mining by day and 46 by night; 24 men by day and 24 by night in the coarse-crushing house—to and including 32 men by day and 32 by night in the fine-crushing and separating house; and 66 men by day and 41 by night doing general work.

Power is furnished by steam. A single Corliss engine of 300 H.P. runs the dynamos for the magnets, for lighting, and for the two electric cranes, which require 50 to 80 H.P. each. A cross-compound engine of 700 H.P. runs the coarse-crushing plant. A triple-expansion vertical engine of 500 H.P. runs the three-high rolls, elevators, conveyors and fans of the fine-crushing and separating plant.

The ore contains about 20 per cent. iron and 0.7 per cent. to 0.8 per cent. phosphorus; the heads of No. 1 magnets contain 40 per cent. iron and the tailings 0.8 per cent. iron; the heads from No. 2 magnets contain 60 per cent. iron; the heads from the dusting chambers contain 64 per cent. iron; the heads from the No. 3 magnets contain from 67 to 68 per cent. iron, the mill tailing carries 1.12 per cent. iron. Analysis of the briquettes show 67 to 68 per cent. iron, 2 to 3 per cent. silica, 0.4 to 0.8 per cent. alumina, 0.05 to 0.10 per cent. manganese, a trace each of lime, magnesia and sulphur, 0.028 to 0.033 per cent. phosphorus, 0.75 per cent. resinous binder, and no moisture. One hundred tons of ore yield about 24 tons of concentrate and 76 tons of tailing. The tailing from No. 1 magnets amounts to 55 per cent. of the ore fed to the mill.

An especially noticeable feature of the mill is the absence of graded crushing and sizing; this is allowable because fine ore is not considered a source of loss in the magnetic treatment.

At Guldsmedshyttan, Sweden, the Guldsmedshytte Aktiebolag is operating a concentrating and briquetting plant of 60,000 tons yearly capacity similar to the Herrang installation above described. Grondal No. V separators are employed.

At Svarto, near Lulea, a magnetite ore rich in phosphorus is being separated for the value of the apatite as well as the cleaned iron concentrate. This plant was erected in 1897 by the Norbottom Ore Improvement Co. to treat ores from the Gellivara Mines. The ore carries from 0.01 to 3 per cent. phosphorus, averaging 1 per cent.; the average iron content is 58 per cent. The texture of the ore materially aids in the saving of the apatite, as it consists of sharply defined crystals of the different minerals whose cohesion is low.

The run of mine ore is subjected to a rough hand picking and then crushed in a Blake crusher and Swensen rolls to pass a 14 mm. screen. The ore is then dried in a cylindrical dryer 10 meters long by 1.4 meters diameter, inclined at an angle of 5 degrees. The cyl-

electromagnetic-separator-magnetic-concentration

inder rotates once in 5 seconds and is heated by a stream of hot gases from a fire box at the lower end. The ore is fed to the cylinder by revolving feed plates and at the discharge falls into rolls which reduce it to pass a 1-mm. screen.

The separation is accomplished by four Monarch separators, arranged in two independent units, two machines tandem. The first separator of each unit makes a clean magnetite product, a tailing rich in phosphorus, and a middling product which is re-treated on the second separator, which makes two products only, tailing rich in phosphorus, and a concentrate. The dust is removed from the Monarch separators by an exhaust fan and treated on a Herbele wet-type separator. The iron product amounts to 85 per cent. of the feed and carries 70 per cent. iron, and 0.127 per cent. phosphorus. The tailing from the separators carries 25.5 per cent. iron and 13.7 per cent. phosphorus.

The tailing is jigged and the apatite removed as far as possible from the magnetite by water concentration. The apatite product is then treated chemically for the removal of remaining magnetite and ground to an impalpable powder in a ball mill using flint grinding balls. The powdered apatite is mixed with calcined soda ash and heated to a dull-red heat in a two-stage calcining furnace. The product is finely ground, and as shipped contains 30 per cent. phosphoric acid in soluble form; it is used as a fertilizer. The mill flow sheet follows on page 104.

electromagnetic-separator-briquetting-furnace

The capacity of the plant is from 2000 to 2500 metric tons per week. The separators take 7 amperes at 100 volts.

At Grangesberg, Sweden, a magnetic concentration plant, equipped with Eriksson, Forsgren and Wenstrom separators, is treating ores carrying magnetite and hematite in a quartz gangue. The mill flow sheet follows on page 105.

At Dannemora, Sweden, a magnetic cobbing plant constructed

electromagnetic separator flow sheet-2

in 1903 is in operation on small ores; the Wenstrom separator is employed. The run of mine ore is subjected to hand picking, a clean magnetite product carrying up to 60 per cent. being thrown out and sent directly to the furnaces. The ore is lifted by elevator to the top floor of the mill and dumped into a bin of 1.5 cu. yds. capacity. The mill flow sheet follows on page 106.

electromagnetic separator flow sheet mill

The crude ore carries magnetite, hematite, and pyrites in pegmatite and schistose material. The ore carries about 40 per cent. iron and the concentrate from 60 to 61 per cent. iron. The concentrate is roasted to remove sulphur.

At Flogbeget, near Ludvika, Sweden, magnetic concentration plant built in 1906 and employing the Grondal Type V separator is in operation on magnetic ores.

At Klacka, Sweden, the Klacka-Lerbergs Grufvebolag is operating a magnetic concentration plant equipped with Wenstrom cobbing separators for the sizes coarser than ¾ in. and the Grondal Types I and II for the fine sizes.

After passing the ball mills 77 per cent. of the pulp passes 0.15 mm. The ore carries from 38 to 39 per cent. iron, and the concentrate, amounting to 45.9 per cent. of the feed, 58 to 59 per

electromagnetic separator flow sheet dannemora mill

electromagnetic separator flow sheet flogbeget mill

cent. iron. The tailing product carries from 12.7 to 14.6 per cent. iron. The plant is operated by 6 men, and requires 20 H.P. and 200 liters of water per minute. The mill produces 20 metric tons of concentrate per day.

At Persberg, Sweden, a Grondal Type I separator is treating low-grade magnetite ore carrying from 15 to 20 per cent. iron. The ore is crushed in a ball mill to pass 5 mm. The finished product carries 57 per cent. iron and amounts to 21 per cent. of the feed. The capacity of the plant is 2500 metric tons per annum. Eight men are employed and 55 H.P. are required to operate the plant. The water consumption is 200 liters per minute. The separator is excited by from 5 to 7 amperes at 30 volts.

At Romme, Sweden, a lean magnetite ore carrying 22 to 25 per cent. iron is separated by Grondal Type II separators. The ore is crushed in a ball mill to pass 1.5 mm. The finished product carries from 60 to 64 per cent. iron and the tailing averages 10.6 per

electromagnetic separator flow sheet klacka mill

cent. iron. Each separator puts through ¼ metric ton per hour; the magnets are excited by 3 amperes at 90 volts. Fourteen men and 60 H.P. are required to operate the plant. The water used amounts to 600 liters per minute.

At Strassa, Sweden, Grondal Type I and Type II separators are treating ore carrying 36.8 per cent. iron, 0.014 per cent. phosphorus, and 0.11 per cent. sulphur. The ore is crushed to pass 1 mm. in ball mills. The finished product carries 61.58 per cent. iron, 0.006 per cent. phosphorus, and 0.045 per cent. sulphur; it amounts to 45.5 per cent. of the raw ore. The tailing carries 12 per cent. iron. The mill has a capacity of from 30 to 40 metric tons daily and employs 17 men. From 30 to 35 H.P. are required to operate the plant, and from 150 to 200 liters of water are used per minute. The separator is excited by 1.7 amperes at 30 volts. A Grondal Type V separator and a briquetting plant has been added to this installation.

At Bredsjo, Sweden, a Grondal Type II separator is treating a magnetite ore carrying 45.3 per cent. iron, 0.0083 per cent. phosphorus, and 0.198 per cent. sulphur. The ore is crushed to pass 1.5 mm. The finished product amounts to 48.6 per cent. of the feed and carries 64 per cent, iron, 0.0023 per cent. phosphorus, and 0.082 per cent. sulphur. The tailing carries 7 per cent. iron. 40 H.P. are required to operate the plant, which employs 4 men and has a capacity of 30 metric tons per day. A Grondal Type V separator has recently been added to this plant. The concentrate is briquetted. The present capacity of the plant is 40,000 metric tons per annum.

At Norberg, Sweden, an Ericksson separator is used at the Kallmora Separating Works, treating magnetite ores.

At Bagga, Sweden, a Grondal Type I separator is working on an ore carrying magnetite, hematite, amphibole and quartz. It averages from 30 to 40 per cent. iron. The finished product amounts to 63.7 per cent. of the raw ore and carries from 60 to 62 per cent. iron. Ball mills are used for fine grinding. The magnets are excited by from 8 to 10 amperes at 35 volts.

At Lomberget, Sweden, a magnetic-concentration mill employing the Forsgren separator has been in operation on magnetite ores since 1903.

At Bjornberget, Sweden, a magnetic-concentration mill employing the Eriksson separator has been in operation on magnetite ores since 1904.

At Kungsgrufvan, Sweden, a magnetic-concentration mill employing the Froeding separator has been in operation on magnetite ores since 1905.

At Langgrufvan, Sweden, a magnetic-concentration mill employing the Froeding separator has been in operation on magnetite ores since 1905. A Morgardshammer separator has recently been added to this plant.

At Vintjarn, Sweden, a magnetic-concentration mill erected in 1906 is in operation on magnetite ores employing the Hallberg separator.

At Hjulsjo, Sweden, a magnetic-concentration mill erected in 1906 is in operation on magnetite ores. The Grondal Type V separator is employed. The concentrate is briquetted.

At Lulea, Sweden, the Karlsvik Mill, built in 1906, is treating magnetite ores on Grondal Types IV and V separators. The concentrate is briquetted. The crude ore carries 1 per cent. phosphorus, which is reduced to 0.005 per cent. in the concentrate.

At Uttersberg, Sweden, the Uttersberg Bruks Aktiebolag is operating a magnetic-concentration mill on magnetite ores. The plant was built in 1906 and has a yearly capacity of 12,000 metric tons. The Grondal Type V separator is employed. The concentrate is briquetted.

At Syd Varanger, Norway, a magnetic-separation plant having a yearly capacity of 1,200,000 tons of crude ore is being installed. It will contain 56 Grondal ball mills, 200 Grondal No. 5 separators, and 20 Grondal briquetting kilns. The ore will be mined by steam shovels. The test runs on this ore give the following results:

electromagnetic-separator-results

It is expected to produce 600,000 tons of briquettes yearly, which will be shipped to Germany.

At Salangen, Norway, a Grondal concentrating and briquetting plant having a yearly capacity of 300,000 tons of ore is being installed. The test runs on this ore give the following results :

electromagnetic-separator-crude-ore

It is expected to produce 100,000 tons of briquettes yearly, which will be shipped to Germany.

At Langbau Risberg, Kantorp, and Striberg, Sweden, the following type of mill is used for the separation of magnetite and hematite from waste:

electromagnetic-separator-feed

At Pitkaranta, Finland, a plant equipped with Dellvik-Grondal separators has been in operation since 1894, treating a low-grade magnetite ore. The ore carries magnetite in tough serpentine accompanied by small amounts of blende, pyrite, chalcopyrite, and pyrrhotite. The ore, which is intimately mixed, is crushed with difficulty; the average size of grain is somewhat less than ½ mm. The ore carries on an average 30 per cent. iron, of which 80 per cent. only is in the form of magnetite, the balance being chemically combined as sulphides and silicates; it carries from 4 to 5 per cent. sulphur. The first mill was built in 1894 and was enlarged to 350 metric tons daily capacity in 1898; it is situated at Ladogasse 3.5 to 7 km. from the mines, with which it is connected by rail.

The tracks from the mines deliver ore into bins 10 meters above the sill floor of the mill, from which the crushers are fed direct. There are four rock breakers which handle ore up to 250 mm. size. From the breakers the ore is delivered in egg size to eight Grondal ball mills. The ball mills are cast-iron cylinders lined with armor plate; there are two sizes employed. Four of the mills are 1.75 meters in diameter by 0.8 meter long, and four are 2 meters diameter by 1 meter long. The cylinders are turned on an inclined axis, the crushing being accomplished by cast-steel balls. The smaller mills are employed on the more easily crushed ores and put through from 8 to 50 tons in 24 hours; the larger mills were designed especially for the hardest ore and treat 30 tons per 24 hours. The linings are renewed once in 15 months, and fresh balls are introduced from time to time. The ore is crushed to pass 1 mm., but a large percentage is much finer; a screen analysis of the discharge of ball mills follows:

electromagnetic-separator-size-in-millimeters

Tests on the discharge of the mills show but 44 per cent. of the magnetite to exist as free particles, and as a result the concentrate rarely exceeds 61 per cent. iron; a higher-grade concentrate could be made, but it would be at the expense of such a loss in the tailing as to eliminate profit on this low-grade ore. The products from the old mill carried from 65 to 71 per cent. iron in the concentrate and 1 to 1½ per cent. iron present as magnetite in the tailing; the new mill concentrate carries from 59 to 61 per cent. iron, and the tailing from ½ to 1 per cent. iron present as magnetite. The raw ore contains from 0.08 to 1 per cent. phosphorus; the concentrates average 0.042 per cent. phosphorus; the sulphur in the concentrate is 0.6 per cent., mostly as blende, which mineral is intimately associated with the magnetite.

The separators take 8 amperes at 35 volts and put through from 25 to 50 tons of ore per day, according to the iron content. The ball mills deliver by gravity to the separators which are 2 meters above the working floor and 5 meters above the highest waste discharge.

The fine concentrate is allowed to drain for a few days and is then pressed into briquettes which are sintered into a firm mass by exposure to a heat of 800° C, which also largely eliminates the sulphur.

In 1900 425-kgm. of 61 per cent. concentrate were made from one ton of raw ore. One metric ton of 61 per cent. concentrate cost $3.40 during the same period.

Power is derived from a waterfall 7 km. from the mill and transmitted by electricity: the ball mills, crushers, and separators take 160 E.H.P. and the elevator, pumps, and railroad respectively 8, 6, and 25 E.H.P. In winter the feed water is warmed to 7 or 8° C.

Separation of Magnetite as an Impurity

Certain ores of zinc and lead, corundum, etc., carry magnetite where this mineral is regarded as an objectionable impurity and from which it is eliminated by magnetic separation.

At Santa Olalla, Huelva, Spain, the Sociedad Minas de Cala is operating a magnetic separating plant on magnetite ores carrying chalcopyrite, and also experimenting on a mixture carrying the same minerals with hematite and silica.

The ore is reduced by jaw crusher to 3 to 5 cm. and delivered by bucket elevator to hopper bins having capacity for 10 hours’ run. From these bins the ore is fed to a Smidt ball mill by an Eriksson automatic feeder, and reduced to pass 1 mm. This pulp is sent by launder to an Eriksson magnetic separator. The results of the separation follow:

electromagnetic-separator-magnetite

The reseparation of the magnetite concentrates is made to remove the copper with its combined sulphur; what disposal is made of this iron-copper-sulphur product could not be learned.

At the Ryllshytans Zinc Mines, Sweden, a Grondal Type I separator is employed to separate magnetite from blende.

In Raglan Township, Ontario, the Canada Corundum Co. employs a magnetic separator in cleaning corundum concentrates. The ore carries corundum associated with magnetite and mica in a feldspathic gangue. The ore is crushed with breaker and rolls and concentrated with jigs and tables. The concentrates passing 8 mesh are dried and the magnetite removed by the separator. The output is about three tons of cleaned concentrates per day.