Benefication of chrysotile by wet processing-the resource without the hazard
 
    
    - Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 9
- File Size:
- 523 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1986
Abstract
Chrysotile asbestos is a valuable resource.  Used as a reinforcement in asbestos cement,  products are obtained which are cheap, are not  attacked by vermin, do not rot or support growth  of fungi and are unaffected by water or humid  conditions. Such products are of great value in the developing countries where inexpensive  and durable building materials and pressure  pipe are very important to development, housing  and water supplies. Concern over the adverse effects of  inhaling asbestos has led to the introduction  of increasingly stringent controls world wide  on the quantities of airborne asbestos per- missible in the occupational situation. Wet  processing has the potential for virtually  eliminating the environmental concerns with  asbestos dust both in fibre production and in  the materials handling section of the manufac- ture of asbestos cement products. In addition,  high efficiencies associated with wet process- ing mean that better yields are obtained and  that the tailings which are dumped have a  lower residual asbestos content. Since early 1977, ICI Australia and  Woodsreef Mines have been engaged in a programme  of research to develop and evaluate a wet mill- ingprocess to produce, from ore and existing  tailings, high grade fibre suitable for use in  asbestos cement products. The process has been  developed through microscopic studies, labora- tory bench scale experiments, work in a small  scale semi-continuous plant and product evalua- tion on experimental size Hatschek asbestos  cement machines. A prototype mill with a  normal feed rate of 1z tonnes per hour and  capable of producing pipe grade asbestos from  Woodsreef ore has been constructed and was  operational from January, 1982 to July, 1983. A range of asbestos cement products have  been made successfully on full scale Hatschek  machines using fibre from ore and tailings  milled in the prototype mill. Economic evaluations indicate that a wet  process mill would be cheaper to build, operate  and maintain than an equivalent dry process  plant. A commercial plant has been designed 1. Manager New Process Development, Woodsreef Mines Limited, Barraba, Australia.  2. Senior Lecturer, Department of Chemical  Engineering, Monash University, Vic, Australia.  formerly Senior Research Officer, Research Department, ICI Australia  Limited
Citation
APA: (1986) Benefication of chrysotile by wet processing-the resource without the hazard
MLA: Benefication of chrysotile by wet processing-the resource without the hazard. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1986.
