A Test Apparatus for Studying the Effects of Weathering on Self-Heating of Sulphides

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
F. Rosenblum J. A. Finch K. E. Waters J. E. Nesset
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
9
File Size:
1745 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2015

Abstract

An advanced laboratory-scale weathering apparatus has been developed at McGill University to study the effects of weathering (ambient temperature oxidation) on the self-heating of sulphides. Previous work by the authors has shown that the problematic self-heating of sulphides is inherently linked to the degree of oxidation (weathering) of the minerals: un-oxidized active sulphides exhibit little or no self-heating while the same material when weathered can generate extensive self-heating bringing temperatures well above 100 0C. In this study the effects of environmental conditions (weathering time, ambient temperature, sample moisture, relative humidity, and oxygen content) were evaluated with respect to the self-heating response of a pentlandite-pyrrhotite nickel sulphide concentrate.
Citation

APA: F. Rosenblum J. A. Finch K. E. Waters J. E. Nesset  (2015)  A Test Apparatus for Studying the Effects of Weathering on Self-Heating of Sulphides

MLA: F. Rosenblum J. A. Finch K. E. Waters J. E. Nesset A Test Apparatus for Studying the Effects of Weathering on Self-Heating of Sulphides. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2015.

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