A New Medium-Intensity Drum Type Permanent Magnetic Separator And Its Practical Application For Processing Ores And Minerals In Wet And Dry Modes

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 5
- File Size:
- 340 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1995
Abstract
During the last years many new concepts have been presented for magnetic separation of feebly magnetic minerals by using the new high-duty permanent magnetic material especially in Open Gradient Magnet Systems (OGMS). In this respect KHD Humboldt Wedag AG developed an improved version of a drum-type magnetic separator called PERMOS® with a special magnetic field configuration for the NdFeB permanent magnets, which gives a magnetic field strength of at least 0.7 Tesla and a wide working zone outside the drum. The magnet system within the PERMOS® unit is no longer made of relatively large magnet blocks of alternating radial magnetisation; the system is now made up of a multitude of small NdFeB bars with a specially oriented magnetisation. This PERMOS® Open Gradient Magnetic Separator can be used for dry magnetic separations in "top-feed" and 'free-fall" feed configuration as well as in the conventional wet "drum-type" feed mode. It allows high throughput rates of up to 40 metric tons of solids per hour and meter of drum length without any clogging problems, even when strongly magnetic com-pounds are present in the feed material. The important design features and the actual machine characteristics of the improved PERMOS® units for dry and wet magnetic separation are described and typical examples for their commercial application for industrial minerals and for martitic iron ores are presented.
Citation
APA:
(1995) A New Medium-Intensity Drum Type Permanent Magnetic Separator And Its Practical Application For Processing Ores And Minerals In Wet And Dry ModesMLA: A New Medium-Intensity Drum Type Permanent Magnetic Separator And Its Practical Application For Processing Ores And Minerals In Wet And Dry Modes. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1995.