Piston press test procedures for predicting energy-size reduction of high pressure grinding rolls

High Pressure Grinding Rolls (HPGR) have been used for over 20 years, however the technology has not received wide industry acceptance despite reports of substantial energy advantages. One barrier is that full and fair consideration cannot be given to HPGR-based comminution circuits for early-stage...

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Main Author: Davaanyam, Zorigtkhuu
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2015
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/54154
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-541542018-01-05T17:28:21Z Piston press test procedures for predicting energy-size reduction of high pressure grinding rolls Davaanyam, Zorigtkhuu High Pressure Grinding Rolls (HPGR) have been used for over 20 years, however the technology has not received wide industry acceptance despite reports of substantial energy advantages. One barrier is that full and fair consideration cannot be given to HPGR-based comminution circuits for early-stage mining projects, because industry standard tests require large sample sizes for evaluation of the technology. The main objective of the research was to develop methodologies, requiring small sample quantities, to predict the energy–size reduction performance of HPGRs. A key outcome is the development of three piston press testing procedures that require significantly less sample than standard HPGR evaluation methods. One method, referred to as the direct calibration methodology, involves calibrating results of piston press tests against pilot-scale HPGR tests. This methodology was developed primarily for situations where HPGR test data is only available for a composite sample and the energy requirements of individual geometallurgical units within a deposit are to be determined. To address the case where HPGR test results are not available, a second method was developed which relies only on piston press testing and empirical equations that were determined from a database of pilot-scale HPGR results. The simulation-based methodology was also developed to be able to assess the impact of changes in HPGR operation or circuit configuration on comminution performance. An existing energy–breakage model was adopted and modified for application to particle-bed comminution. The three methodologies were compared by applying them to samples from a copper-gold deposit in central British Columbia. Through utilization of these methodologies, the energy–size reduction performance of the HPGR technology can be predicted with small sample requirements which can be applied to a broad range of ore types and provide a stronger statistical basis for the process design. During development of the methodologies, significant research outcomes resulted. Controlled piston press and HPGR pilot tests on the same samples confirmed that normalized product PSDs of the respective equipment can be regarded as equivalent. Furthermore, data from particle-bed comminution tests was used to determine master curves describing breakage appearance functions for the compression mode of breakage. Applied Science, Faculty of Mining Engineering, Keevil Institute of Graduate 2015-07-24T16:14:23Z 2015-07-24T16:14:23Z 2015 2015-09 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/54154 eng Attribution 2.5 Canada http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ca/ University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description High Pressure Grinding Rolls (HPGR) have been used for over 20 years, however the technology has not received wide industry acceptance despite reports of substantial energy advantages. One barrier is that full and fair consideration cannot be given to HPGR-based comminution circuits for early-stage mining projects, because industry standard tests require large sample sizes for evaluation of the technology. The main objective of the research was to develop methodologies, requiring small sample quantities, to predict the energy–size reduction performance of HPGRs. A key outcome is the development of three piston press testing procedures that require significantly less sample than standard HPGR evaluation methods. One method, referred to as the direct calibration methodology, involves calibrating results of piston press tests against pilot-scale HPGR tests. This methodology was developed primarily for situations where HPGR test data is only available for a composite sample and the energy requirements of individual geometallurgical units within a deposit are to be determined. To address the case where HPGR test results are not available, a second method was developed which relies only on piston press testing and empirical equations that were determined from a database of pilot-scale HPGR results. The simulation-based methodology was also developed to be able to assess the impact of changes in HPGR operation or circuit configuration on comminution performance. An existing energy–breakage model was adopted and modified for application to particle-bed comminution. The three methodologies were compared by applying them to samples from a copper-gold deposit in central British Columbia. Through utilization of these methodologies, the energy–size reduction performance of the HPGR technology can be predicted with small sample requirements which can be applied to a broad range of ore types and provide a stronger statistical basis for the process design. During development of the methodologies, significant research outcomes resulted. Controlled piston press and HPGR pilot tests on the same samples confirmed that normalized product PSDs of the respective equipment can be regarded as equivalent. Furthermore, data from particle-bed comminution tests was used to determine master curves describing breakage appearance functions for the compression mode of breakage. === Applied Science, Faculty of === Mining Engineering, Keevil Institute of === Graduate
author Davaanyam, Zorigtkhuu
spellingShingle Davaanyam, Zorigtkhuu
Piston press test procedures for predicting energy-size reduction of high pressure grinding rolls
author_facet Davaanyam, Zorigtkhuu
author_sort Davaanyam, Zorigtkhuu
title Piston press test procedures for predicting energy-size reduction of high pressure grinding rolls
title_short Piston press test procedures for predicting energy-size reduction of high pressure grinding rolls
title_full Piston press test procedures for predicting energy-size reduction of high pressure grinding rolls
title_fullStr Piston press test procedures for predicting energy-size reduction of high pressure grinding rolls
title_full_unstemmed Piston press test procedures for predicting energy-size reduction of high pressure grinding rolls
title_sort piston press test procedures for predicting energy-size reduction of high pressure grinding rolls
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/54154
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