Development of a protocol to determine the sorting potential of particulate ore material

The objective of this research was to develop a protocol/ methodology to determine the potential for an ore to be sorted using sensor-based sorting. The research builds upon previous methodologies in literature to determine ore sortability. The first attempt to create a standard methodology to asses...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Duncan, Michael Graeme
Other Authors: Deglon, David A
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/20327
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-203272020-12-10T05:11:07Z Development of a protocol to determine the sorting potential of particulate ore material Duncan, Michael Graeme Deglon, David A Chemical Engineering The objective of this research was to develop a protocol/ methodology to determine the potential for an ore to be sorted using sensor-based sorting. The research builds upon previous methodologies in literature to determine ore sortability. The first attempt to create a standard methodology to assess the amenability of an ore to sorting at a pilot-scale was developed by Fitzpatrick (2008). Tong (2012) developed a methodology to assess the amenability of an ore to sensor-based sorting on an ideal laboratory-scale. These methodologies focus on determining the upgrading potential of an ore based on ore sorting amenability tests. In order to gain further acceptance of sorting technology in the mining industry, Lessard et al. (2015) developed a method to determine the impact of ore sorting on an operation from an economic perspective. The protocol, developed during the current research, is used to determine the potential ore sortability based, firstly, on intrinsic particle properties and, secondly, based on laboratory-scale sensor sortability tests using ideal and industrial sensor measurement parameters. The intrinsic sortability results represent the ideal/ best- case sortability if a perfect separator existed and are calculated based on particle-by-particle ore characterisation. Ore that is intrinsically sortable is further assessed based on ideal laboratory-scale sensor sort ability tests using selected sensors. Ore sorting sensors that show potential based on the ideal sensor tests are further assessed by determining the sort ability of the ore using sensor measurement parameters similar to those used on industrial-scale ore sorting machines 2016-07-13T07:45:57Z 2016-07-13T07:45:57Z 2016 Master Thesis Masters MSc (Eng) http://hdl.handle.net/11427/20327 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment Department of Chemical Engineering
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Chemical Engineering
spellingShingle Chemical Engineering
Duncan, Michael Graeme
Development of a protocol to determine the sorting potential of particulate ore material
description The objective of this research was to develop a protocol/ methodology to determine the potential for an ore to be sorted using sensor-based sorting. The research builds upon previous methodologies in literature to determine ore sortability. The first attempt to create a standard methodology to assess the amenability of an ore to sorting at a pilot-scale was developed by Fitzpatrick (2008). Tong (2012) developed a methodology to assess the amenability of an ore to sensor-based sorting on an ideal laboratory-scale. These methodologies focus on determining the upgrading potential of an ore based on ore sorting amenability tests. In order to gain further acceptance of sorting technology in the mining industry, Lessard et al. (2015) developed a method to determine the impact of ore sorting on an operation from an economic perspective. The protocol, developed during the current research, is used to determine the potential ore sortability based, firstly, on intrinsic particle properties and, secondly, based on laboratory-scale sensor sortability tests using ideal and industrial sensor measurement parameters. The intrinsic sortability results represent the ideal/ best- case sortability if a perfect separator existed and are calculated based on particle-by-particle ore characterisation. Ore that is intrinsically sortable is further assessed based on ideal laboratory-scale sensor sort ability tests using selected sensors. Ore sorting sensors that show potential based on the ideal sensor tests are further assessed by determining the sort ability of the ore using sensor measurement parameters similar to those used on industrial-scale ore sorting machines
author2 Deglon, David A
author_facet Deglon, David A
Duncan, Michael Graeme
author Duncan, Michael Graeme
author_sort Duncan, Michael Graeme
title Development of a protocol to determine the sorting potential of particulate ore material
title_short Development of a protocol to determine the sorting potential of particulate ore material
title_full Development of a protocol to determine the sorting potential of particulate ore material
title_fullStr Development of a protocol to determine the sorting potential of particulate ore material
title_full_unstemmed Development of a protocol to determine the sorting potential of particulate ore material
title_sort development of a protocol to determine the sorting potential of particulate ore material
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/20327
work_keys_str_mv AT duncanmichaelgraeme developmentofaprotocoltodeterminethesortingpotentialofparticulateorematerial
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